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

37-610 Speaker Wiring Replacement
#1

Greetings All,

Low and behold out of the dirty dusty closet lies a forgotten radio I had meant to get to someday now on the work bench, aka a Philco 37-610. One of the things that obviously needs replacement is the speaker wiring. Follow the leads, and away we go.

The question is what type of wiring is suitable for this? Will insulated colored speaker wire do, like 16 ga or close to that or will the type of wire be particular for impedence matching or performance?

Philco's are cool. Come back soon Ron Ramirez. See you all at ARCI meet this Sunday.

73 de,

Gary/N9VU
#2

Hi Gary

I know someone in the r.a.r+p newsgroup has already answered this for you, but 18 or even 20 gauge would be quite sufficient for what you're doing. If you wanted to use the repro cloth-covered wire from Radio Daze, you could get a piece of green, a piece of white, and a piece of blue, and be almost authentic. I've used 20 gauge cloth-covered wire for speakers in the past and never had an issue with them. I'm out of the stuff now, though, else I would send you three wires, sorry.

If you don't go the cloth-covered route, plastic insulated wire of 18 or 20 gauge will serve the purpose.

--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN
#3

mrphilco Wrote:Hi Gary

I know someone in the r.a.r+p newsgroup has already answered this for you, but 18 or even 20 gauge would be quite sufficient for what you're doing. If you wanted to use the repro cloth-covered wire from Radio Daze, you could get a piece of green, a piece of white, and a piece of blue, and be almost authentic. I've used 20 gauge cloth-covered wire for speakers in the past and never had an issue with them. I'm out of the stuff now, though, else I would send you three wires, sorry.

If you don't go the cloth-covered route, plastic insulated wire of 18 or 20 gauge will serve the purpose.

Thanks Ron. Authenticity is cool, but for now I want something that will do the job and look neat as well. I'm sort of anxious to get this set going, had it quite awhile and just realized without doing this it's a fire hazard to say the least.

73 de,

Gary/N9VU




Users browsing this thread:
[-]
Recent Posts
Philco 60 Squealing
I have recapped and replaced out of tolerance resistors and so on. Radio plays nicely on fairly strong stations. The pro...dconant — 10:55 AM
Philco 46-420 Code 121 Reception issues
Welcome Eric, I agree with Bob and far as the two main electrolytic filter capacitors did you change them yourself or w...radiorich — 11:43 PM
Philco 46-420 Code 121 Reception issues
You mentioned the Philco manual and going through the check points...just to be sure we're on the same page here's the m...klondike98 — 08:13 PM
Philco 42-1008 conversion kit
Interesting. I haven't seen that before.klondike98 — 07:02 PM
12' Philco
Yes I had looked for it on the web as well some time back and could not find it. I was glad to see it turned up in Ron'...klondike98 — 06:59 PM
Shadow Meter Bulb
Now if you had a set with a tuning light then the bulb type is important to the circuit, some sets used those prior to t...Arran — 04:58 PM
Shadow Meter Bulb
Ok. Thanks for the correction.RossH — 03:09 PM
Model 28L
For 28 you will probably need to buy a Hammond 125CSE. Or any of the series of the power you need, with SE suffix. Then ...morzh — 02:09 PM
37-60 revision 6
I am restoring a Philco 37-60 and it shows run 6 they removed the ground from G3 of the 6K7G and put the G3 to -2.5v for...bobbyd1200 — 01:01 PM
Shadow Meter Bulb
Mike is correct on the bulb connection, two separate circuits. I found that by rotating the bulb and sliding it forward ...RodB — 12:19 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 6834 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 6833 Guest(s)
Avatar

>