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#1
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Beat up old Zenith Z426M1 radio
This is a beat up old Zenith solid state AM/FM table radio that I inherited from my Uncle when he passed away in '94. I'm guessing this to be a '69 model from the "Z" prefix in the model number. It sat on top of his refrigerator for my entire life and he played it every morning. He always told me that when he died, he wanted me to take that radio home before I did anything else. It actually plays nice and has good reception. I guess this one was made before Zenith started outsourcing their radios from Korea and Taiwan. This radio was a little beat up when I got it; but, is more beat up now. Shortly after I got it, the shelf that it was sitting on fell apart and this radio, along with some 78 rpm records and some Bakelite radios hit the floor. This was the only radio that survived (with a few more battle scars). I hope to soon patch it up and make it look presentable. BTW, I don't think I've seen this particular model Zenith before. I've seen several Zenith solid state table radios; but, they were all in plastic cabinets.
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#2
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For long-distance reception and good sound quality, nothing beats an older Zenith radio--the original Zenith Radio Corporation of Chicago did not cut corners with any of their sets.
I'm not familiar with yours, but I have three wood-cabinet Zeniths (K731, C845 and an MJ1035) that pull in stations like crazy (using just the line-cord antennas) and sound great, although the MJ1035 has volume control issues; it plays, brings in stations like a magnet, but to hear the darn thing you have to have your ear right up against the speaker! I'm looking for a replacement for that control (a 1-megohm dual potentiometer), but haven't found one yet. I'm wondering if those pots are even available anymore. ![]() If your Zenith in fact was one of the originals, made before the company began outsourcing to the Orient (!), I'd hang on to it. They don't make them like that anymore. (I say this all the time about older Zenith radios, so it probably sounds like a cliche by now, but being a collector of older Zeniths I believe it.) The cabinet looks like it's in poor shape, but I think it can be refinished. That the radio still works and is in one piece after falling off a shelf speaks volumes for the excellent build quality of the older Zenith receivers. (The sets made in Korea and Taiwan would likely be ruined if they fell off anything more than a foot or two off the ground.) I have a Zenith R-70 solid-state AM/FM eleven-transistor portable with almost the entire radio on one PC board; a fall from any height could ruin it (or at least cause severe damage ) in no time flat. My Zenith MJ1035 arrived at my apartment (I got it from an AK member in Arizona last year) with two controls very loose on the chassis, but amazingly, the set still worked. However, the power switch, which is mounted on the tone control, was one of the loose ones; it kept getting pushed in (to the off position) every time I tried to reset it. To make a very long story as short as possible, the chassis was in and out of its cabinet so many times (from having to reset the switch) I must have pulled a connection or two off the volume control, which is probably (even likely) causing the low-volume problem I'm having now with the radio. Believe me, though, if it weren't for that, this radio would be sounding absolutely fabulous with its two-way speaker system and the matching stereo extension speaker.Hang in there with your Z426M1. As I said, this may well have been one of the last radios made by the original Zenith Radio Corporation before they started outsourcing, and is worth keeping. You say it sounds good and has good sensitivity, so it seems like you won't have to do much, if anything, inside the cabinet. Refinish the latter and you will have a radio that will serve you well for many years to come. These old sets were worthy, IMHO, of Zenith's trademark slogan of years ago: The quality goes in before the name goes on.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. |
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#3
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It doesn't look like it was made overseas - those knobs are the same as my K731 (bandswitch too.)
If you don't want to refinish it, clean it up real good, get the paper off the top and rub on some finish restorer - I couldn't find Fromby's locally but bought some other brand from Home Depot and used it on the scratched-up top of my Capehart stereo - a definite improvement.
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AUdubon5425 Youtube Channel |
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#4
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Old English might work as well.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. |
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#5
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These are the type of sets that are not collected in big numbers, so will become the rarest over time.....also they work well, too!
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| Audiokarma |
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