Johnny B
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 73
- Location
- N. America
So! I've managed to ACTUALLY FINISH a radio.
After the first two... failures... I took this lovely little tabletop home to work on. It's a General Electric TA100, manufactured, by the looks of it, sometime around the mid fifties to early sixties. It's straddling the razor edge between Mid Century Modern and Space Age.
Poor thing was in neglected condition when I took it. The white had faded to an almost orange, there were green paint droplets on the case, and most of the insides were smashed (ie the board was cracked and broken).
So I cleaned the paint off it, polished the case, cleaned it up, repainted the white to a brilliant satin and retrofitted the interior. Have a look!
The radio restored and given a nice little table for showing off
No more green paint!
The back. Very clean looking. Surprisingly the particle board was the best looking piece of the radio.
And the interior. I twist tied all wire connections together, then soldered them, then encased them in plastic glue so they won't touch or be interfered with. I mounted the speaker circuitry into a piece of pine cut to shape and with a hole drilled out for the dial. Because this particular speaker used only one button for all control (ie you turned it to turn it on and adjust the volume) I just glued the original power button into place.
Aaaand the final run. I'm playing the moon landing since it most likely was heard on this set 40 years ago The sound isn't great quality but that's my camera, not the radio:
u tub'n it here
So! Tell me what you guys think. This little number is going up on eBay in a few days for $0.99 to see how far it gets (probably $1.14) and then I'll pull 2 more off the shelf and refit them. Yay for summer unemployment!
After the first two... failures... I took this lovely little tabletop home to work on. It's a General Electric TA100, manufactured, by the looks of it, sometime around the mid fifties to early sixties. It's straddling the razor edge between Mid Century Modern and Space Age.
Poor thing was in neglected condition when I took it. The white had faded to an almost orange, there were green paint droplets on the case, and most of the insides were smashed (ie the board was cracked and broken).
So I cleaned the paint off it, polished the case, cleaned it up, repainted the white to a brilliant satin and retrofitted the interior. Have a look!
The radio restored and given a nice little table for showing off
No more green paint!
The back. Very clean looking. Surprisingly the particle board was the best looking piece of the radio.
And the interior. I twist tied all wire connections together, then soldered them, then encased them in plastic glue so they won't touch or be interfered with. I mounted the speaker circuitry into a piece of pine cut to shape and with a hole drilled out for the dial. Because this particular speaker used only one button for all control (ie you turned it to turn it on and adjust the volume) I just glued the original power button into place.
Aaaand the final run. I'm playing the moon landing since it most likely was heard on this set 40 years ago The sound isn't great quality but that's my camera, not the radio:
u tub'n it here
So! Tell me what you guys think. This little number is going up on eBay in a few days for $0.99 to see how far it gets (probably $1.14) and then I'll pull 2 more off the shelf and refit them. Yay for summer unemployment!