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#1
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Andrea?
My bro found this pic and wants an ID on the set. Looks Andrea like to me. 1949 or so. I rely on your genius to give the good answer. And probably lead tinsel on the tree.
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“Once you eliminate the impossible...whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth." Sherlock Holmes. Last edited by Dave A; 08-28-2018 at 11:04 PM. |
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#2
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Crosley 9-407 with a Dumont chassis.
![]() http://www.vintagetvsets.com/crosley.htm Forget the TV, that pedal car would be worth a fortune today! |
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#3
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Wow! I bet that family either smoked heavily or lived in a coal-heated house.
I took one look at Dave's picture and thought of the RA-103C/RA-110-like Crosley set built by Du Mont, but those cabinets did not have the dark circle above channel selector and radio dial. I've never seen a speaker grille turn that dark! Just wondering, since Eric's picture reminded me, has anyone made reproduction CRT (foam?) rubber masks for these sets? I've never seen one in any condition. other than complete melt. It apparently snapped on to the plastic protrusions behind the CRT mask. James |
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#4
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Quote:
Tom |
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#5
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We use coal, it don't smoke, smell, and our roof has no soot on it like our neighbors
who all use oil..... And why would there be any soot inside...? I like that mini-Olds ! .
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Yes you can call me "Squirrel boy" |
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#6
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Quote:
How does coal compare cost wise to ng or oil? I don't think you can even get coal for home heating around here anymore. |
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#7
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Yep, Pontiac. '55
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#8
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Quote:
![]() Back in the 1940's, when I was growing up in rural Western Tennessee, my parents rented an apartment in a very run-down Colonial Mansion that predated the US Civil War. Our apartment came with three open fireplaces for heat. Natural Gas was not available at the time. Wood was too expensive to use. To install an oil furnace in that rental house would have cost much more than my father made in a year. Electric heat was too expensive, as we were outside the TVA supplied area, and heat pumps had not been invented. My father's choice was to use found wood and newspaper to start a fire, and once that was burning hot, to throw in small lumps of coal. We lived there 6 years. The first winter, my father sealed off two of the three fireplaces and closed off those rooms during the cold. That was the dirtiest place that I've ever lived. Fun times during the Summer, miserable during the Winter. Shortly before the second winter, the gas line had finally been installed on our street and our family was the first to connect to that line. The other family living in this house waited over two years before they converted. The third apartment was never occupied during the time we lived there. It had no fireplaces and could only have been used in the summer. James |
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#9
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They have coal right down the street $255/ton, I get it myself in my pickup 1/2 ton
loads at a time. Less time consuming and easier to manage than wood. My house has electric heat. Heat pump supplemented with 12KW toaster coils, like a big hair dryer in the middle of the house. Also air solar panels in a room behind the garage. The solar panels save us over 20% heating most years. Back there is a little room with the solar plumbing, so I built a coal furnace that uses the solar plumbing on cloudy days. This year I made a extra duct switch to gang the two together, so on solar days I can also use the stove, just pass the hot air through both. This area I call un-improved, as it has wells, septic, and no natural gas. So the trucked in fuels are used here for everything. Most is home heating oil. For some reason our house was kinda modern with all electric stuff inside. I was not thrilled with it, but over time made improvements in the heater, and solar, and added the coal.... This guy was not always a coal dealer, when I built my stove I got the coal from a guy in Pa. but I think the cost of diesel made it harder for him to compete on long hauls. I have no idea how much heat my stove/furnace puts out btu wise, I use to run it all day and night, but it is just too much as it needs to eat every hour or two. It's not automatic. So now it runs days, and I have it shut off around 12 midnight and the coils run if needed.... I have various fans running blowers on appliance timers turn it off 2 hrs after the last feeding. Same timers run the solar fans, just turn it off for cloudy days. I will say that our electric runs up to $5k on the worst winters before I repaired the solar, added the coal, and turned off the heat pump. The heat pump worked ok until the defrost would kick in, then the 2 hours it took to get the house warm would be wiped out in 15 minutes when it would reverse to unfreeze the outside unit. It was a stupid system for this area, and the heat-freeze cycle was never ending, I think the O&R people had our house pay most of their stock dividend each year.... They must have thought we had a pot farm in the garage.... At first I thought it was a chevy.... .
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Yes you can call me "Squirrel boy" Last edited by Username1; 12-17-2014 at 09:40 AM. |
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#10
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Well While I continue to search CL for a working time machine, I only have today's
energy to look at. And while I have seen many pictures of really smokey smoke stacks from many years ago, my experiences with coal are quite different. I can hardly tell when my stove is running, both inside, and outside. But when any of the neighborhood wood stoves are on I can tell, And the roofs of the oil burners are all pretty dirty compared to mine.... I am sure most stoves are not really that efficient, especially from many years ago, and smokey fuel rich fires were sources of lots of smoke.... But coal needs a good draft, and fuel rich air starved coal fires go out, they tend not to smoke.... I think most of the smoke from what you remember was non anthracite coal fires, or mixed fuel fires, like yours was, or really poor fire place designs.... I guess I just can't imagine living with something that smokes inside.... Or did I just get lucky.... .
__________________
Yes you can call me "Squirrel boy" |
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#11
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Keeps the house within 2 degrees of the thermostat setting. It uses rice coal. the hopper hold 100 pounds. Our prices are a bit cheaper than yours. We are right in the heart of anthracite country. And you never see nothing out of the chimney, just heat waves. |
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#12
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Great to see a classic early post-war tabletop TV in a period photo. 9 out of 10 times it's always a console. It's strange that so many small 7" sets were sold, including the 3" Pilot's, but you almost never see a period picture with one of those in them.
BTW, the Pontiac pedal car would worth a couple of thousand dollars today. |
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#13
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My stove I made myself, it's in it's 5th iteration, each rebuild makes it a little more efficient. And it's made as a furnace, not an actual stove. It has provisions to make it automatic, but right now it's manual feed, with appliance timers running all the fans. Same as the air handler, timer over-ride so I can have the coal stove heat the house or solar, and the coils stay off... No smoke here either, you can't tell when it's on by any smell, just when you start it with wood first off.... As mine is manual, I can use any size coal, last year the local guy ran out of rice, I generally use nut, he has it, they all seem to have nut pretty abundantly. Funny note: Watched the Honeymooners last night, Norton and Ralph took a civil service exam, one question was about math and heating, and they gave coal cost at $15./ton..... Ralph made $62./week as a Dus Briver....(another episode) .
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Yes you can call me "Squirrel boy" Last edited by Username1; 01-04-2015 at 09:09 AM. |
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#14
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[QUOTE=Username1;3122715]Great to hear it ! I'm sure the stuff I use comes from there !
No smoke here either, you can't tell when it's on by any smell, just when you start it with wood first off... I found a easy way to light mine off. I use a 120 volt heating element out of a rv refrigerator, just bury it in the coal, plug it in and turn on the combustion blower. Within a few minutes you got a line of coal burning. Unplug and lift it out of the coal. |
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#15
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Not to dwell on the pedal car, but it is a 1956 Pontiac. Similar to the '55 but the side chrome trim, ect, is different. The '55 is on the left. '56 on the right.
-Steve D.
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Please visit my CT-100, CTC-5, vintage color tv site: http://www.wtv-zone.com/Stevetek/ Last edited by Steve D.; 05-25-2017 at 01:23 PM. |
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