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

Philco PT-44
#1

Hi All:

I'm new to the forum. I just acquired a PT-44 table radio (wood). It looks very nice. It plays somewhat.

I have two questions:

1- Is this radio a desirable and/or a rare find, approx value working in good shape?

2- Would this radio be considered an easy or tough radio to work on and fix?

Any help would be appreciated.

TommyR Icon_smile
#2

Hi Tommy,
2 Pt-44's have sold recently on Ebay, 1 for $137.50 and the other for $150.
Since it plays "somewhat" it should not be too difficult to recondition.
Main thing is to replace electrolytic and paper capacitors and check for resistors that have drifted in value.

Carl
Northern Panhandle, WV
#3

And watch out for those rubber-covered wires. The rubber insulation dries up and falls off over time, creating a real potential for short circuits.

--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN
#4

Ron Ramirez Wrote:And watch out for those rubber-covered wires. The rubber insulation dries up and falls off over time, creating a real potential for short circuits.

OK -- I plan to go slow and careful on this radio.

"Measure twice - cut once".

TommyR Icon_smile
#5

Going nice and slow, especially if this is your first restoration, is good advice. Replace wires and parts one at a time so you don't lose track of where you are, and it should be fairly straight forward.

As far as capacitor values, don't worry too much about not finding "exact" replacement values. In other words, you'll run into some .05 uf caps; modern .047 uf will do the job. 33 uf will replace a 30 uf, 47 uf for 50 uf, .033 will replace .03, and so forth. The important thing is the working voltage - replace with either equal or greater value; don't go down!

After the caps are replaced, an alignment will help it operate much better. We'll cross that bridge when we get there. It sounds like it sort-of works right now, so odds are you have a good set of tubes.

One more bit of advice - replace the power cord with a modern polarized plug. Wire the neutral side (with the wide blade) closest to ground. Be sure to ask if you have any more questions - we're here to help! Icon_smile

Sounds like a nice radio - good luck with it!

Bill

Sent from my Pentium II on the AT&T Dial Network
#6

Bill Hutchinson Wrote:Going nice and slow, especially if this is your first restoration, is good advice. Replace wires and parts one at a time so you don't lose track of where you are, and it should be fairly straight forward.

As far as capacitor values, don't worry too much about not finding "exact" replacement values. In other words, you'll run into some .05 uf caps; modern .047 uf will do the job. 33 uf will replace a 30 uf, 47 uf for 50 uf, .033 will replace .03, and so forth. The important thing is the working voltage - replace with either equal or greater value; don't go down!

After the caps are replaced, an alignment will help it operate much better. We'll cross that bridge when we get there. It sounds like it sort-of works right now, so odds are you have a good set of tubes.

One more bit of advice - replace the power cord with a modern polarized plug. Wire the neutral side (with the wide blade) closest to ground. Be sure to ask if you have any more questions - we're here to help! Icon_smile

Sounds like a nice radio - good luck with it!

Bill

Thanks Bill.

I plan to keep it and use it -- when you think about it, THESE sets were meant to be fixed. To see one in a garbage landfill would be upsetting.

TommyR Icon_smile
#7

Ron Ramirez Wrote:And watch out for those rubber-covered wires. The rubber insulation dries up and falls off over time, creating a real potential for short circuits.

Yes, replacing the old rubber covered wire can be the worst part of the job. Icon_evil

Carl
Northern Panhandle, WV




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Need to purchase some accessories for restoration of my Old Philco Radio
Hi Paulo, Welcome to the Philco Phorum. I can see why you want to find good reproduction parts. That is a bea...MrFixr55 — 11:10 PM
HiFi (Chifi) tube amp build - but my own design.
Tim, I have some bakelite sockets in my work shop that I can dig up. I believe quite a few are NOS. I will take photo...RodB — 10:03 PM
Philco 610B oscillator wiring
> The cathode as noted is wired directly to the ground side of the heater filament for that tube, not to the #17 and ...Radioroslyn — 08:12 PM
HiFi (Chifi) tube amp build - but my own design.
Tim; I noticed your post a little late, but I would take one of the junk sockets and try to break a chunk out of it wi...Arran — 08:07 PM
Need to purchase some accessories for restoration of my Old Philco Radio
Here is a list of resources found in our online library that you might find useful. Mike's Gobs of Knobs email addres...klondike98 — 01:46 PM
First Radio restoration
Hi Tubeman, Welcome to the Philco Phorum.  Phamily Phriendly Pfun with Phine Pholks Phull of Philco Phacts. (See a p...MrFixr55 — 12:33 PM
First Radio restoration
You could post in the WANTED ADs section here on the Phorum and see if anyone has an RF generator that they want to sell...klondike98 — 11:55 AM
Zenith H725
Good ideas, thank you Arrange and Rich. I have the adhesive aluminum foil already and can try that immediately. More ...EdHolland — 10:18 AM
Graphics for majestic 1050 dial glass.
Murf; I found this thread on the ARF, the first photo has a pretty good view of the dial glass. Regards ArranArran — 01:12 AM
Zenith H725
hello Ed, how about that speacial tape used for ducting it's like foil or how about thin piece of aluminum roof flash...radiorich — 12:19 AM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 1388 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 1387 Guest(s)
Avatar

>