Saturday, November 12, 2022

Dad's Magnificent Radio Collection (a work in progress) Part 1



Dad's collection of old radios and gramophones is impossible to take in immediately.  Just when you think you've checked everything out, boom, there is a whole new shelf you missed the first time.



This has been a labour of love for years.  Every radio works and he has personally opened up every one of them, changed tubes and did whatever was necessary to nurse them back to health.  It's a bit like an animal shelter but for radios.
 



Researching some of these radios, I came across someone selling these restored machines with audio inputs to play your mp3s or whatever through the speakers.  Considering there is so little broadcast on AM radio or shortwave these days, it's nice to know these old radios can still be enjoyed in more ways than just decorative furnishing. 





Here are two charming variations on the Philco Table Model 1937.  They are quite similar at first glance but the dials and knobs are different as well as the art deco speeding bullet .  I have identified the one below as Philco 37-630T Tabletop but, while I have found radios with the same speaker design as the one above, I haven't found one with the same knob arrangement.  The closest is the Model_37-610T but it isn't an exact match.
  

Next is the Sentinel portable radio with slide rule tuner, 2 knobs and a flexible handle.  Dad knows his radios better than anyone else and he claims it is from 1950 but I found an ad for this model from a 1948 magazine.  


"Sentinel Radio ... Newest of the New! AC-DC-Battery Portable ... Play It Anywhere! ...".




Hey, this one is still in the box.  Presumably, anything more modern with an FM band will be more useful today, at least for a few more years.  Wait a minute!  Port for MP3s?  Uh.  this one is quite modern and didn't merit  a place in Dad's inventory list but still a nifty radio.  The design and look is still used  by other stereo manufacturers


Wow!  Sony Walkman and clock radio for kids.  Still in the box!  Sony made sturdy Walkmans back in the day so if they designed something for kids, I'll bet they were designed to withstand quite a beating.  I once had the original Walkman model.   I was hitch-hiking one summer day to St. Andrews and my Walkman slipped out of my belt while I climbed way up to the passenger seat of a transport truck and hit the road below.  It had a major surface scuff mark but continued to play with no problem.  


Northern Midget Electric Blue.  1951.  She's Dynamite  The bullet style continues.  


RCA Victor Nipper brown.  1951  Go! Go! Go!   Incidentally, Nipper was the name of the RCA dog.  


Gem radio.  1951  


Dad will have read this book cover to cover.  Every radio in his collection has been taken apart.  Most of them, if not all,  had to be fixed at some time. 


The Trav-ler 1948 tube radio is also called the Smiling Radio because of the front lower curve.




This is the Zenith clock radio with an alarm from 1959.  It's also called the Owl Eye clock radio.


Regal radio.  Crazy Man Crazy.  Bullet style. 1953


Another RCA Victor from 1941.   Duke Ellington
 

Sparton 1949.  I suppose that was pronounced Spar-tone.   Drinkin’ Wine, Spo-Dee-O-Dee by “Stick” McGhee and His Buddies



Northern Electric Model 5002 1946 Baby Champ with 3 knobsBakelite case.  Brown knobs.


And white




On this Emerson  from 1947, someone might have been listening to   Call It Stormy Monday but Tuesday Is Just as Bad by T-Bone Walker  


Stewart Warner 1954  Hmmm.  Or is it 1952?  I found a service manual for this model in'52. Was there anything good on the radio that year?  Oh yeah.  Tons of good stuff.



 Admiral model 7T10-5K1 5 tube bake-lite table top radio.  1947


Atwater Kent 60 from 1929.  That is a serious radio before the age of portables. Waitin' for a Train was released that year.  I don't know when this film was made because I don't think talkies had been developed that early.
  

Tucked in under it is the Westinghouse Table Record Player (and radio of course) 1946


Two gramophones stacked on top of  a record cabinet.


My pictures aren't good enough to tell which gramophones are which but the years run between 1892 and 1920.










This Philco from 1953 was someone's vision of the future. No doubt astronauts were using equipment with a similar look in sci-fi movies of that time,


There are too many radios for one post. I need to just call this a work-in-progress for now.  This should be a 3 or 5 part post. Possibly, likely, even more.


Part 3 
https://alackofcleardirection.blogspot.com/2022/11/dads-magnificent-radio-collection-work_26.html

Part 4

Part 5

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

An incredible collection Edward. Soo many interesting radios. Each one a beauty and so aesthetically pleasing. Nothing like what is mass produced in China these days. The history there and craftsmanship!

priendly said...

I think I might.have missed a couple but I will get them next time. This post is way too long as is. I'm going to refurbish it as several smaller parts to make it mote reader friendly.

Bob Boyd said...

Like works of art. Beautiful to look at and must have been fantastic to listen to when they were in homes everywhere. I would loved to have listened to one of those huge ones. I wonder if the sound quality was better and if they picked up stations farther away than many modern radios.

priendly said...

I think that was the deal, at least with the 1940s models. Dad once told me they had to compensate for weaker transmitters back then. Some of them came with quite impressive speakers for that reason.