That Telefunken console looks great, and with a bit of work (I don't know how much; you can probably find a replacement for that bum speaker if indeed it is defective [might just be disconnected], but the dial drive might be difficult to get working as some of those big German consoles had very complicated dial stringing arrangements), it should be working as well as it did when it was new. My late grandmother had a console stereo something like that which she bought at an estate sale in the early 1970s (not a Telefunken, although the entire unit appeared to have been made in Germany owing to the German markings on the back cover and front panel, in addition to European tube types, e. g. it had an EL84 vertical tuning eye tube and so on). I also got an old Grundig model 2168 hi-fi multiband radio from a friend of mine in the mid-1970s. That set was in bad shape (dial scale and drive mechanism missing, tuning eye flopping around in the cabinet, speaker mounting board broken, etc.) when I got it, but I managed to get it working for about five years. I even patched an old Webcor R2R tape recorder into the amplifier (through a DIN connector at the rear of the radio chassis) and wound up with a small, reasonably good-sounding (IMHO) mono audio system. Something (don't remember what) went wrong with the radio, however, eventually to cause me to trash it.

This radio was also obviously made for the German market, as the FM band tuned only from 88 to around 100 MHz or so. My grandmother's console (the maufacturer and model name were Edelmuth Imperial respectively, IIRC), however, tuned the entire FM broadcast band from 88-108 MHz, so it may well have been an export model. It worked very well until about five years after her death, at which time it developed a very loud 60-Hz hum, probably due to defective filter caps. The tipoff to this set's German roots, again, was the fact that the shortwave tuning scales were marked 5,5 - 6,0 - etc., using a comma rather than a decimal point between the numerals. Odd, IMO, considering the set tuned the entire U. S. FM broadcast band. I realize they use commas rather than decimal points for decimal fractions in Europe, but since this console was obviously meant for the U. S. market, it seems strange that the dial would have been marked this way;

the radio chassis had German tubes and markings as well.