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#1
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NY Times old TV story
Really Enjoyed this story in a recent New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/21/ar...A14%22%7D&_r=0
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#2
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Very enjoyable read!
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#3
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We still get snow when the converter box
times out. It only happens on channel 3 or 4.
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#4
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Quote:
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#5
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Even as a child of the 90's, and even if I was not part of the hobby I'd still get that story...My folks have always been slow to spend money on the latest electronics.
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Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
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#6
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Quote:
Years ago, I was the first one to have a color TV, VCR and a few other electronic marvels. Now, there's nothing out there that interests me much. |
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#7
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Quote:
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"When resistors increase in value, they're worthless" -Dave G Last edited by DavGoodlin; 12-30-2014 at 07:27 AM. |
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#8
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I remember staying up till all the area stations went off the air....
Some had better sign off presentations than others... Good story.... .
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Yes you can call me "Squirrel boy" |
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#9
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We got "Cable" TV very early on-1964-'65. In those days, it was just a BIG antenna, we got WLOS TV out of Asheville. WLOS was NOT considered "Local" content, so eventually it was dropped. SOMETIMES, we could pick up a station on Channel 3 or 4 out of Spartanburg, SC...Mostly, it was just audio & SORT OF ghostly images.
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Benevolent Despot |
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#10
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Before getting a separate UHF 4-bay bowtie with a mast pre-amp, my brother and I watched independent channels WTAF and WPHL from Philly "through heavy snow" to see the Three Stooges and other BW re-runs on the 1971 Zenith. The audio was perfect
thoughWatching a cartoon or color program this way on UHF was unpleasant - as the color killer would be at its borderline, with colored snow popping in and out, making it impossible to see anything. Great article anyone over 40 can relate to, the Author totally captured my impression of DXing AM on Dad's Philco 46-200 transitone. The hand did get hot - OW
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"When resistors increase in value, they're worthless" -Dave G Last edited by DavGoodlin; 12-29-2014 at 12:44 PM. |
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#11
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I remember being a kid and getting up early on Saturday morning before the local station came on the air. The first thing to show up was a picture of their station, and the announcer said "This is WATE TV-6 in Knoxville, TN, beginning our broadcast day". They would proceed to a recording of a band playing "The Star Spangled Banner" with a background of military airplanes flying over.
When I was a kid, I never thought about watching TV all night long. All three of the stations we could pick up went off the air shortly after midnight. |
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#12
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At my old station...unnamed for this post to protect the suspects...we had a disgruntled sign-off engineer. One night, Ray decided on an on-air editorial. He lit up our TK-42 and pointed it at a station ashtray laying on the news desk with a station matchbook folded to a triangle to stand up on a glorious close-up he had managed. As the signoff announcement droned by "Station WXXX operates at a power of..." Ray ran to the studio and set the matchbook on fire. He then got back to master control to show the NAB seal of good practice. No one noticed.
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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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#13
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I watched the local TV stations in Cleveland (channels 3, 5 and 8 at the time, '60s-'70s) sign on and sign off, back when TV stations still left the air at one or 2 a.m. for three or four hours, signing on again at six a.m. the following morning (long before today's 24-hour television and infomercials).
Channel 8 in Cleveland, the CBS station at the time, would stay on the air well past midnight on Friday nights with horror movies. The other two network stations would leave the air shortly after the last network program ended; the stations would show a couple of local religious programs (I remember "Credo" on channel 3), and then the sign off announcement. After that, snow and static until the stations returned to the air some time around six a.m. I'll never forget one morning back in the '70s when I had my TV on at 5:30 a.m. or thereabouts, before channel 5 in Cleveland signed on. I didn't have any special kind of antenna on my set, just rabbit ears, but I remember seeing a reasonably good picture from the then-NBC affiliate in Flint, Michigan, WNEM-TV on channel 5. Of course, that image went away in a hurry once Cleveland's channel 5 signed on. Even though TV stations don't sign off at night anymore, there are times when some stations interrupt their programming briefly after midnight. I get a PBS station on my cable from a town about 30 miles southwest of here; the station normally runs 24 hours a day, but last night at about 2:00 a.m. or thereabouts, I saw a color bar test chart (not a round test pattern) with a small square bouncing around on the screen, and a black box in the center of the pattern, inside which was "xxxx Columbus" (I couldn't make out the word ahead of the city name, but I think it may have been a network or station ownership ID).
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. |
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#14
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Same thing is true of short wave. Today you can go on line and get perfect "radio" and even TV from overseas, no problem. But SWL'ing in the old days was more fun: the thrill of the hunt, what can you hear, and finally a weak signal coming in from half a world away rising and fading as if influenced by the ocean waves. The programs heard didn't mean as much as the thrill of the reception: truly the medium was the message, and still is.
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Reece Perfection is hard to reach with a screwdriver. |
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#15
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watching tv back then became more of an adventure at times just to get a good picture. We live in the South Bend area and putting up an antenna in order to get Chicago channels was hit or miss at best. Then once we got a color set in the early sixties the problems were multiplied. Keep in mind even as a kid I was good at adjusting the best possible picture. Others weren't so lucky. I remember going in people's houses and wonder how they could set there and watch such a crummy picture. And there again when color started to take off most people didn't know how to adjust the customer controls in order to get an acceptable picture. Then there was always to slide telling us that there were technical difficulties at the station and you got to stare at that annoying slide hoping your favorite show would come back on.
If that wasn't enough there were always those pesky problems like dirty pots causing intermittent problems, dirty tuners making the channels drift or go snowy. I guess that was all part of enjoying that new medium of televison
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