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

model 17 L 1933
#1

Hi I am new here...I have had this radio in my famly for many years,everything seems to work fine...wood cabinet could use some work...someone has put urathane on it and didn`t do a very good job...I am a cabinet maker buy trade,and I an thinking about refinishing it...Does any one have ideas what I should use to strip this or should I sand this...I am planing to use this for a tv show and could use some ideas...thay say there were only 2,200 made and the price back then 1933 sold for around 100 dolars... is this correct...any information would be helpfull......Thanks[attachment=3][attachment=3][attachment=3]
#2

Hi and welcome. Your posting will be
better served in the correct Phorum Section.

Chuck
#3

Welcome, grantman007.

Your 17L will be really nice once you restore it.

A lot of people use Citri-Strip to remove the old finish. Others use a cabinet scraper to scrape the old finish. Whatever you do, I strongly caution you against sanding the cabinet any more than is absolutely necessary! The veneers are very thin and if you go overboard with sanding, you can easily sand through the veneer. So, try to avoid sanding when stripping the cabinet. 4/0 (extra fine) steel wool will be better.

The original finish was tinted lacquer. Mohawk's Medium Walnut would be an excellent toning lacquer for this cabinet, followed by coats of clear gloss lacquer, carefully wet sanded with very, very fine sandpaper (800 grit or better).

grantman007 Wrote:thay say there were only 2,200 made and the price back then 1933 sold for around 100 dolars... is this correct...

Ummm...yes...

http://www.philcoradio.com/gallery/1933b.htm#g

This info was taken from Philco Furniture History, an in-house Philco document which gives data on nearly all Philco cabinets.

--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Philco Model 249 made in England
Thanks for the information MrFixr55.   It's tube amplification and not solid state. TOMfklown — 11:27 AM
Philco Model 249 made in England
Well, I’ll be! I learned something.jrblasde — 11:03 AM
Philco Model 249 made in England
Yes, Garrard was well-regarded for its standalones.morzh — 10:48 AM
Philco 46-480 Electronic Restoration
Quite the interesting stories, sir! Somewhat reminds me of my first job out of school (not that I worked in a similar fi...jrblasde — 09:33 AM
Philco model 40-100
Arran, I restored 2 Canadian battery-crank telephones for a friend a while ago, a Northern Electric (Canadian version of...MrFixr55 — 08:04 AM
Road Trip for a Philco 46-480
Beautiful work, a 79 year old radio brought back to life. The first FM radios for me, a little iffy, had some I just cou...Jimradio — 08:01 AM
Philco 46-480 Electronic Restoration
I was a field engineer for a biomedical company for many years. Many was the time that I was driving home from NYC in t...MrFixr55 — 06:40 AM
Philco 46-480 Electronic Restoration
Don't laugh folks, I have not been above taking a chassis into the bathtub (when Ms. Fixr was out of the house), taping ...MrFixr55 — 06:02 AM
Philco model 40-100
Marion; By "newer style" carbon resistors do you mean the molded type with coloured bands rather then the BE...Arran — 01:00 AM
Philco 46-480 Electronic Restoration
hello jrblasde , your radio sounds great well done !! I bought like 20 years ago a Philco 610b that someone had painte...radiorich — 11:50 PM

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

>