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#1
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Most complicated 50s Philco B&W
I remember from the late 60s when my elderly dad enrolled
in a tv repair course at the local tech high school that there were lots of old Philco B&W sets that were super-complicated in terms of having multiple chassis hooked together with octal-plugged cables. I'm thinking I'd like to get one to fix up. Any suggestions? Oh yes, one other thing: they (the high school classroom) had on display a 15GP22 that had been cut in half lengthwise with a carborundum saw and one half cut further apart to see the shadow mask! There must have been lots of old CTC-100s and 21CT55s and CTC-5s around Ft. Worth at that time since it was one of the very few cities that had color TV in the CTC-100 time frame. |
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#2
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My trade school didnt have them but I know special teaching sets
were made. Be interesting to see who made them. Must be some still around but havnt seen one ever. 73 Zeno
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#3
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The dual chassis Philco's have a reputation of being well designed sets. Not really super complicated though. Lots of sets had dual chassis, old Admirals, Sylvania Sylouettes, etc. Usually makes them easier to work on, not as much junk crammed together.
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#4
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Quote:
From "Scored a 1953 Philco" : http://www.videokarma.org/showthread...ht=1953+philco jr Last edited by jr_tech; 10-22-2013 at 06:26 PM. Reason: add link |
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#5
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That's it exactly, the chassis that is. But no model number.
The model I remember was a table model. I found a picture online of a 1951 Philco 51-T1635. That's close to it. Anybody have a schematic? Last edited by dtvmcdonald; 10-22-2013 at 08:28 PM. |
| Audiokarma |
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#6
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Some of the Philco split-chassis sets:
51 Ad: http://tvhistory.tv/1951-Philco-Brochure.jpg 52 Ad: http://tvhistory.tv/1952-Philco-Brochure1.jpg 53 (no brochure on tv history site)... typical non-UHF table model: http://tvhistory.tv/1953-Philco-2124.JPG 54 Ad: http://tvhistory.tv/1954-Philco-Brochure1.jpg 55 sets look slightly different, but are possibly split chassis (I don't know): http://tvhistory.tv/1955-Philco-Brochure1.jpg From: http://tvhistory.tv/ My 17 inch 53s are 53T-1853 (mahog. console) and 53U-1827 (Birch? table model) My '51 16 inch round CRT set (1634-M?) has a power transformer and 5U4s... My '53s do not. I' m digging... but I don't think I have a schematic for the '51 set. Eric's lovely 21 inch Philco : http://www.vintagetvsets.com/philcof.htm jr Last edited by jr_tech; 10-22-2013 at 09:24 PM. Reason: add info |
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#7
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Easy sets to work on, if you ask me. A lot like working on two radios.
__________________
Bryan |
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#8
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Quote:
The only 'gottcha' that I can remember is on some models, the smaller chassis will not stand on its side for servicing, without flipping over and cracking the base of a few tubes. One solution was to use two small wooden planks with a "C" clamps to support the chassis during service. Once you have seen these well designed sets, which are so easy to repair, you will wonder how only a few short years the same company could make the Predicta, an almost impossible to repair set, that always seemed to need something fixed. To make matters worse for the independent service shops, Philco charged the shops full list price, plus shipping, for the many specialized Predicta replacement parts that were not available from independent jobbers. Jas. |
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#9
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I remember when my brother enrolled in tv repair classes at Arsenal Tech High School in 1980 the sets they had were Magnavox roundies and Rca ctc12-16 and the black and white sets were Philco and Magnavox sets that they repaired for the Indianapolis Public Schools ... I wish I had photos of that shop it was huge when they stopped those classes I got some of the old test equipment and sams photo facts from 1949 to 1969...
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#10
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Quote:
__________________
"When resistors increase in value, they're worthless" -Dave G |
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#11
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Quote:
BTW, the 55-56 models were better sets. A full power transformer and one piece chassis. |
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#12
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If you had brought an SUV to the last ETF meet you could have bought the Philco split chassis console that the RCA you bought from me was sitting on....
I liked the split chassis from a service stand point easy to dismantle and work on. My old 20" console had these metal yoke supports that went to the sides of the cabinet which one could use to prop up the CRT when on the bench for servicing.
__________________
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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#13
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Believe it or not, Philco had service cables for the split chassis sets which made life waaay easier for the technician! Somewhere around here I have a set of those extension cables and I bet there are more sets kicking around that no one realizes what they are for and they get trashed...
Jim |
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#14
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Quote:
To service these sets, we had a felt backed oilcloth that we draped over the set, and then put a sheet of cardboard on that and plopped whichever chassis that had problems --or both chassis-- on top of the cabinet and just connected them up with extension cords! No benchspace lost. The CRT and yoke stayed in the cabinet. Jas. |
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#15
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Quote:
The service men at the TV shop where I apprenticed in the late1950s HATED the Philco 2 chassis sets because the connectors were always a problem. |
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