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

Frayed Wires at Speaker Plug
#1

The Philco 70 I'm restoring( at least attempting) has bare, frayed speaker wires at the male 4 prong connector that plugs into the rear of chassis. Can I drill out the two rivets,separate the plug and then cut and resolder the wires were the insulation is still good? If this will not work maybe I can cut off the plug and replace with a 4 pin "CP" plug? Thanks in advance for your help.
Bill
#2

EXCOT Wrote:The Philco 70 I'm restoring( at least attempting) has bare, frayed speaker wires at the male 4 prong connector that plugs into the rear of chassis. Can I drill out the two rivets,separate the plug and then cut and resolder the wires were the insulation is still good? If this will not work maybe I can cut off the plug and replace with a 4 pin "CP" plug? Thanks in advance for your help.
Bill

Yes, absolutely. This is standard operating procedure, especially if you are replacing the old wires with new cloth-covered wires.

Just be careful drilling out those old rivets. That bakelite plug can break quite easily.

--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN
#3

I have a similar situation. Does anyone know a source for replacement rivets?
#4

I use 3-40 or 2-56 brass screws and nuts and put a "old" patina on them. I put the screw head showing when plugged in and make sure there is only enough screw length to catch the nut for clearance.

Mi dos Centavos
#5

Thanks Ron and Chuck. I carefully drilled off most rivet head on inside of plug with like a 3/16 bit. With a pliers I was able to lift up what was left of rivet head and then I pushed out by hand with correct size punch. When I reassembled I pushed original rivets back in with slip joint pliers and used a center punch to carefully flare rivet head (what was left of it) back out. The brass is soft so it doesn't take much and I followed Ron's suggestion and was careful with bakelite. Then I put drop of super glue down on head to help secure rivet to bakelite. It's not as strong as original but for my needs it should be ok. Bill




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
RCA WV-98c
If this is R22, check the voltage on the wiper (86V). If this is R33, see if the lower pin indeed connected to GND, the ...morzh — 02:29 PM
Philco 38-2 Low Volume
Both sch, the one you showed in the beginning and the one I see on Nostalgia, show 40K for the 2nd audio plate.morzh — 02:25 PM
Model 96 cabinet veneer
I can't figure out what the first step is, let alone the final step. I have tried copying pictures from my hard drive a...TGLager — 01:40 PM
Philco 38-2 Low Volume
I managed to get some more time on this. Hi Mr. FixIT, The radio has been recapped. Many of the resistors were rep...dconant — 01:39 PM
Philco 38-2 Low Volume
Thanks guys for the help. I started looking at these points but I have to quit for the day. I will be looking into this ...dconant — 12:23 PM
RCA WV-98c
Check out this crazy zero pot operation. Touching it drives it crazy. Its rubber tipped. Also the 6al5 has no negative v...daveone23 — 12:08 PM
Philco 38-2 Low Volume
If you check all of that and still have a problem (my first inkling would be one of the 6F6s) then look at the 6J5 phase...RodB — 10:44 AM
RCA WV-98c
Those will probably depend on teh switch combination. Could you list some that you see, their values and what they sh...morzh — 10:26 AM
Model 96 cabinet veneer
You are probably skipping the final step. Once you select the photos you want and they get downloaded, the system assign...RodB — 09:36 AM
RCA WV-98c
At this point, there is no input, just internal voltages Which are incorrect and not sure what they should be.daveone23 — 09:15 AM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 1539 online users. [Complete List]
» 2 Member(s) | 1537 Guest(s)
AvatarAvatar

>