Welcome Guest! Be sure you know and follow the Phorum Rules before posting. Thank you and Enjoy! (January 12) x

Thread Closed
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Batteries for the Philco 39-71!
#1

Building these for a client as we speak. Had to make a set of my own, so I could iron out the bugs.

I'm satisfied with the way these turned out. Had a devil of a time with the A battery. Thought I'd never get the sizing correct. Now it fits like a glove.

My 39-71 now runs on two sets of five 9-volt batteries and four C cells.

Bill
[Image: http://users.mw.net/~bmorris/aysandbees.jpg]
[Image: http://users.mw.net/~bmorris/ainsides.jpg]
[Image: http://users.mw.net/~bmorris/binsides.jpg]
[Image: http://users.mw.net/~bmorris/inside3971.jpg]
#2

Bill - your pictures have disappeared???

--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN
#3

Yep, no one replied, and I needed to reclaim webspace for other projects.
#4

Hey batterymaker, gives us another chance. I'd love to see them, can always use the education. PL
#5

I'll see about reposting them tomorrow.

Bill
#6

To batterymaker, WOW. Thank you very much for reposting the pixs. I believe it is styrofoam and a plastic/phenol sheet on to it? What did you use for sockets and how were they attached to plastic/phenol? Did you manufacture those battery boxes and if so how the heck did you get them so great looking? PL
#7

planigan Wrote:To batterymaker, WOW. Thank you very much for reposting the pixs. I believe it is styrofoam and a plastic/phenol sheet on to it? What did you use for sockets and how were they attached to plastic/phenol? Did you manufacture those battery boxes and if so how the heck did you get them so great looking? PL

Nope, not styro--it's a combination of wood, masonite and PCB. Sockets are PCB drilled to spec and they use the tube socket clinchers. I've found they'll hold battery pins just as well as tube pins.

Everything's done in-house. Had to design the cover based on an original, then they were printed off a color laserjet.

As I heard a British man say about tending hedges, "It's odd work for a little money." Icon_biggrin
#8

Thank you batteryman. The graphics are very impressive. Must have taken many hours of toil but the results are fabulous. PL




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Philco 91 Tuning Condenser
I thought you meant the actual dial....there are rivets.morzh — 08:42 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
This is what I meant. I would start from touching Test Point 12 on the sch. See if you hear hum.morzh — 08:37 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
Here are the links. 6TPZ and 5TPO The speakers are good. I've tried several known good ones. I just have to fi...R3Sons — 06:27 PM
Philco 91 Tuning Condenser
I just found a set screw. Was able to turn dial just enough to see it and loosen it. I have it off now.dconant — 06:14 PM
Philco 91 Tuning Condenser
Hello, Does anyone know how the dial plate comes off the tuning condenser shaft? The dial itself id so warped I can't...dconant — 06:01 PM
Eico 368 TV/FM Sweep Generator
Ron, for the future: In order to change the name of teh topic, 1. Go to the very first post. 2. Hit "Edit...morzh — 04:29 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
Transistors are easy. No converters. If you have input voltage, then just put some signal through. Or touch your fin...morzh — 04:25 PM
462ron
Hi Mike, I believe I tried different ways to change the header for my post but no luck. Anyway thanks for changing it fo...462ron — 04:02 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
Since these radios operated in harsh environments (temp changes and vibration) you could touch a soldering iron to all t...GarySP — 03:18 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
Thank you Gary. Hi Morzh. These radios are 6 transistor radios. Sadly no tubes. Thanks though.R3Sons — 02:19 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 3865 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 3864 Guest(s)
Avatar

>