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

Farnsworth GK-669 . What is this device ?
#1

Hi to all . I have the opportunity to buy a radio console with Farnsworth GK-669 record players inexpensively. Someone knows what this company is and what is this device . Here is a photo ...

                   
#2

Philo Farnsworth was an inventor who is best known for inventing television.  In 1938 he later founded the Farnsworth Radio and Television Company in Ft. Wayne, Indiana:

https://www.biography.com/people/philo-t...orth-40273

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philo_Farnsworth

It is very interesting that one of his radios made it to your country.  What you have is a radio and record player combination that looks to be in very nice condition and is not very common.  If you have space for it you should buy it if it is not very expensive,

John KK4ZLF
Lexington, KY
"illegitimis non carborundum"
#3

Thank you, Elliot. I have to find a free space for this rare device
  He was brought from Germany and offered me by my longtime friend ... He wants $ 200 worth of expenses for the road. I think that he is worth it.
#4

Here comes my device ... I will share my impressions and information about it. To my surprise, there was even an old passport and a maintenance manual. From him I learned a lot of useful information. This unit has a universal power supply for networks from 105 volts to 250 volts AC voltage. Also there are modifications for power supply from the networks at 50 and 60 Hz. It is unequivocal that the company made them for export all over the world.

               
   
#5

Still in a few words ..
1) Model 39 model year, but released in the 38th. There were similar console models and desktop models, with and without a player.
2) 5 ranges. Broadcasting and 4 shortwave ones with overlap from 3MHz to 23MHz, that is, from 13 to 100 meters. KV-1 is 3mHz ... 8MHz (34 ... 100 meters), KV-2 8 ... 11 MHz (27. .33 meters), KV-3 - 11MGts..13MHz (22..27 meters), KV-4 - 13MHz-23 MHz (13-22 meters).
3) Six lamps, all octal. 6SA7, 6J5, 6SK7, 6SQ7, 6V6-GT, 6X5. . Such a high frequency of confident reception on HF (23 MHz) became possible thanks to a converter on two lamps with a separate heterodyne at 6J5. The optical fine adjustment indicator is absent.
4) To my great surprise in the record compartment I found a passport (with a diagram), a description and warranty cards for the console and a turntable with a gramophone changer. Today, I carefully read and understood that the gramophone is no longer a one-speed one by 78 turns, but a later one, three-speed one. A cartridge with a corrunda rather than a metal needle is rather a plus than a minus, you can listen to your old records without much worry. I think that for this purpose it was changed somewhere in the early 50's. She also has a passport and instructions.
5) The speaker is no longer with magnetization, but with a permanent magnet, but of a decent size - 30 centimeters. A very large bass, even from such a low-power amplifier - everything in the radio and even the room resonated, I had to secure everything and tighten it.

   
           
#6

I finished the repair of the radio chassis and the adjustment of the mechanism of the gramophone record player.
I took a short video with a demonstration of the work of the programmer with a gramophone changer.

Artist - Fausto Papetti, alto saxophone, jazz composition Washington square.

[Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RTQmFHCjLts]




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Road Trip for a Philco 46-480
Good morning, folks! I’ve finished the cabinet and the electrical restoration, and have detailed those in their respecti...jrblasde — 10:56 AM
Studebaker/Philco AC-2687 car radio
Arran, Thanks for checking you manuals. I appreciate that. Let me know what you find. PhilPdouglaski — 08:46 AM
Studebaker/Philco AC-2687 car radio
I have some car radio service manuals, Riders I think (not to be confused with the big blue binders), so I may see if on...Arran — 01:20 AM
Philco model 40-100
Greetings; Here is an update, I found a listing on fleabay for a similar chassis to yours, and it has a photo of what...Arran — 12:58 AM
Philco model 40-100
Greetings; I think I may have found a clue as to what is missing, from a search I made, there is a rear view of the c...Arran — 12:12 AM
Philco model 40-100
I recently acquired a Philco model 40-100 farm (battery) radio. The radio was in very good condition except the red on f...mhamby — 05:59 PM
Studebaker/Philco AC-2687 car radio
Hello, Richard the radio is an AC-2687 Studebaker model. The Philco model is S -5323 and the chassis p/n is S-5523Pdouglaski — 11:52 AM
48-482 rear panel help
The 48-482 is an AC only set as well, featuring a power transformer. While the transformer shouldn’t get “hot”, it is ye...jrblasde — 11:12 AM
Studebaker/Philco AC-2687 car radio
I gave a Chrysler/MoPar car radio from 1954, it was made by Philco, and it uses two chassis, one has the power supply an...Arran — 11:06 AM
48-482 rear panel help
Hello keithchip. You could make a hardboard back for the set, but make sure you provide plenty of ventilation holes in ...GarySP — 11:04 AM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 2166 online users. [Complete List]
» 3 Member(s) | 2163 Guest(s)
AvatarAvatarAvatar

>