Does this radio/phono exist?
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Here's the story: a close friend of mine is waxing nostalgic, and wants to find the radio she remembers from her childhood. After listening to her description, and knowing her age, I showed her some possibilities, and she is certain the radio she had was a 49-1606.
According to her, she distinctly remembers the openings for the records, and the handle shape for the phono.
I thought I was home free, until she mentioned the phono played 45's, which rules out the 49-1606.
I looked through the gallery here, and couldn't find a later model that (a) looked like the 49-1606, and (b) had a 3 speed phono.
The 50-1720 was close, but she insists the albums were visible on their shelf without opening the phono door.
So... is her memory incorrect, or might there be such a radio as she remembers?
Thank you!
Ira
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Its possible that the set had the phonograph swapped out for a more modern one at some point. These old phono/radio sets often have a phono that is not original to the set.
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This Philco had M-9C record changer.
People who do not drink, do not smoke, do not eat red meat will one day feel really stupid lying there and dying from nothing.
(This post was last modified: 05-09-2019, 11:59 AM by morzh.)
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" . . . the phono played 45's, which rules out the 49-1606."
A crash course on the history of the 45 rpm record:
J. Krivine, in his book, JUKEBOX SATURDAY NIGHT, assures us that Seeburg, ( the jukebox manufacturer), issued the FIRST commercially-produced jukebox totally dedicated to playing the new 45 rpm record, . . . . . . in 1949 !
It was the model M-100-B.
RCA had issued the 45 rpm record earlier that year, in response to Columbia's issuing of the the 33 rpm LP the previous year in 1948, and Seeburg took a full-fledged gamble on RCA's new format.
Some argue the 45 came even earlier , but I disregard all undocumented suggestion.
My point is, while I'm not sure your friend had a Philco 49-1606, she could have very well had a 1949 something, that played 45 rpm records.
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...or she's is thinking of 33 1/3 rpm records rather than 45s. It did play those. http://www.nostalgiaair.org/pagesbymodel...014067.pdf
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Actually this model used the M-9 changer - not the M-9C which played 33-1/3 and 78 rpm records. The M-9 was a 78 rpm (only) unit. It did not play 45 rpm records as they were too new to be included when this radio-phonograph was built.
https://philcoradio.com/library/download...8-1949.pdf
https://philcoradio.com/library/download...8-1949.pdf
If your friend's 49-1606 played 45 rpm records, the phonograph must have been replaced with a newer unit.
--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN
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Thanks, everyone. After addition discussion, my friend thought she might have been incorrect about the 45 speed, possibly hearing a track off of a 33-1/3 record.
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