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Not noticing the sticky about this, my wife painstakingly created the station tabs, after many trial and errors on the exact fit. The rounded corners are necessary, BTW. Mine just had the corners nipped off by me, rather than rounded. They appear to be held in by a subtle ridges in each opening; so the length of each tab is critical. Too long and the tension leaves them too pushed-out. Too short and they are just sitting there, unsupported. It's another labor of love
. DENNIS
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Here's a pointer you may never need.
Never set your radio outside where the wind can blow inside the back. It will pop all the tabs out the front.
Go ahead, ask me how I know this.
"I just might turn into smoke, but I feel fine"
http://www.russoldradios.com/
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Oh, ho ho ho! Sometimes the best, well, maybe the most poignant lessone are learned that way!
I learned that Philco 18B tombstones are top heavy and prone to tipping over when you only have the speaker installed. I learned this when my freshly restored cabinet did a nose dive and landed on sharp, metal objects on my work table.
I also learned to NEVER assume that just because the electrolytics are missing on the surface of the chassis of the radio that you just got in and you can see newer caps under the chassis means that they were replaced correctly. I smoked the transformer of my RCA 263 this way, and spent awhile looking for a suitable replacement as a result.
And no, the caps were most definitely not done right. Some sub-moron had replaced both electrolytics with ONE that was equal to the combined value of the originals.
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City: York PA
Quote:Here's a pointer you may never need.
Here's
another one with those station tabs. As I was slipping in the last one, it fell from my fingers, but disappeared quickly; unlike the others that fluttered to the ground
. After removing the bezel to peer inside, the tab was no where to be found. Not wanting to disconnect and remove the chassis, I whined to my wife about my problem. She reached up under the chassis shelf and quickly found it
.
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City: St Clair Shores, MI, USA
Phlogiston Wrote:Here's a pointer you may never need.
Never set your radio outside where the wind can blow inside the back. It will pop all the tabs out the front.
Go ahead, ask me how I know this.
How do you know this?
-Brian
If you collect or are interested in antique telephones, please visit Classic Rotary Phones
http://www.classicrotaryphones.com/forum/index.php
Posts: 2,118
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BDM Wrote:Phlogiston Wrote:Here's a pointer you may never need.
Never set your radio outside where the wind can blow inside the back. It will pop all the tabs out the front.
Go ahead, ask me how I know this.
How do you know this?
It took a while to find them out in the gravel driveway.
"I just might turn into smoke, but I feel fine"
http://www.russoldradios.com/
Posts: 393
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City: St Clair Shores, MI, USA
lol.....sorry
-Brian
If you collect or are interested in antique telephones, please visit Classic Rotary Phones
http://www.classicrotaryphones.com/forum/index.php