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

Help identifying Philco transistor from 1960's
#1

In the early 1960’s I owned an AM transistor radio. I have tried for years to find the maker of this radio as well as the model number and possibly a photo. I have always believed it was made by Philco, but I could be wrong about that. The radio was roughly 12”x10”. It had a black leather case with a leather strap handle at the top. The the entire front of the radio was chrome. The slide rule dial at the top had a chrome sliding cover that could be opened or closed. There were two chrome knobs. It ran forever on 6-8 “D” batteries. Your help in identifying this radio would be greatly appreciated. Bob Bonner.
#2

Welcome to the Phorum! Your description covers a lot of radios of that era I think, but perhaps someone will recognize it. The photos on this site stop at 1960 so probably don't have what you are looking for. There are photos on the radiomuseum.org site that might also help you. You can search for specific manufacturers and time periods on the main search page. Maybe something like this one, http://www.radiomuseum.org/r/philco_t_805t80.html or a General Electric http://www.radiomuseum.org/r/general_el_p_865b.html . Unfortunately I think there are lot to look through if its not a Philco (and they don't have pictures of all radios either). Good Luck!
#3

Thank you sooooo much! You were spot on. The Philco link you supplied at http://www.radiomuseum.org/r/philco_t_805t80.html
was IT. I can't thank you enough. Your 1st guess was correct.Icon_biggrin
#4

Glad I could help...it was mostly luck! Maybe one will come up for sale on ebay or craigslist and you can pick one up.
Icon_razz




Users browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
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
Heathkit Sweep Generator TS-4
Ron Instead of Quick reply, go to New Reply, then go to the title of the very first post, and change the title text the...morzh — 02:00 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
I am not a specialist in car radios. I suspect they might use vibrators to convert 12V to acceptable tube voltages, so ...morzh — 01:58 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
Welcome to the Phorum, R3Sons! I have very limited experience with car radios other than installing custom radios back ...GarySP — 01:08 PM
462ron
OK, I need to rename this thread to say..Eico 368 TV/FM Sweep Generator instead of the current title..Heathkit Sweep Gen...462ron — 12:49 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
Hello, I have a Philco (Ford) 6TPZ and a 5TPO radio.  I replaced the electrolytic capacitors in both.  I have the SAMS m...R3Sons — 12:29 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently no members online.

>