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#1
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Was this a radio and 45 record player?
http://cgi.ebay.com.au/RADIO-PHONE-V...item415977857c
No affiliation. The auction title makes it sound like a radiotelephone, but deeper in he calls it a GRAMOPHONE. Aussie for record player I think. An RCA 6XY-5A radio and record player. Looks like you were to insert the record into a slot on the front. The mechanism looks to be messed up on this one though.
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#2
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Yes, it's both, a combo RCA Slot type 45 player with a radio, pretty hard to find too.
The Ferrite antenna is busted, the mechanism looks okay, that's just the way they look, not much to them and not great by any means, but rather clever in their design. I have three of the 45 player only version of this, including a clear demonstrator model. |
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#3
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The seller must have meant "phono". Interesting little player, kind of an RCA take on the old Philco 'Bing Crosby' model.
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tvontheporch.com |
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#4
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I didn't think RCA made a combination radio-phono version of the Slide-o-matic.
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#5
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The term gramophone was used in America as a name for phonographs, but it was mainly used in the time of 100% mechanical phonos (ie. pre 1930s).
I've seen that type of RCA minus the radio and amp at Webs anti-Q mall several years ago, unfortunatly it was gone the last time I went there (and that time I wanted to buy it ).It reminds me of the Philco Bing Crosby set I have. Tom C. |
| Audiokarma |
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#6
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Quote:
BTW, I think it's unusual for an American radio-phono unit like this one to show up in Australia. The way the power supply is set up (for 115 volts AC), I don't think it will work in the latter country, as Australia has 220 volt 50Hz power. A stepdown transformer would have to be used, and even then there are no guarantees that the phono motor will run at the correct speed on 50-Hz electricity. I'm not sure the radio would work in Australia either, since their AM broadcast band is probably different from ours here in north America and Canada. I see Australian radios on eBay occasionally with tuning dials that show the local stations for a given region of the country (not unlike Packard-Bell's "Stationized" radios in the US), and I have a jingle from Australian station 6KY that is part of a sampler package from PAMS of Dallas, Texas, a producer of commercial radio jingles. I'd provide a link to that 6KY jingle but I don't want to run afoul of the law, as these samplers are copyrighted by PAMS Productions.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. |
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#7
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Possibly an American packed up all his stuff to immigrate to Australia back in the 50's, and found that the phono section unusable, but kept it for the radio section.
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