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 battery radios
#1

How hard are these to restore? I have my eyes on a 1937 model that has a 6 volt battery supply. Where can I find or how do I build a 6volt supply and a 1.5 volt, 90 volt supply. How good of a performer are these battery sets?
thanks
Chris
#2

The only battery-operated Philco sets I have ever restored were Model 38 sets. These were made from 1933 to 1936, have AM and the old "police" band. They play just fine, and the instant-on feature is pretty neat, too - you don't have to wait for it to warm up since the tubes are low current, directly heated filament type.

If the set you are looking at is a 6 volt set, it sounds like it was made to run (only) on a 6 volt battery. So you would only need a 6 volt DC source with a decent current capability. I'm sure it has a vibrator power supply, which introduces problems of its own if it uses a synchronous-type vibrator.

What is the model number of the set you are looking at? I would know more what to say about it if I knew exactly which set you were interested in...

Icon_smile

--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN
#3

I've done several battery radios, and the most difficult ones I've done were a couple of Zenith farm radios, a 5F134 and a 6V27. Leaned plenty from that pair! Had to build some fairly elaborate power supplies for those ones. I'll admit the 5F134 power supply was a bit of overkill (I used a 135V TV voltage regulator and a big transformer), and the 6V27 I'm still working on, with the intention of building a solid state vibrator replacement and run it off of a 6V power supply. A bit ambitious, you think? Icon_smile

Armed with the info I learned from the Zeniths, I've had a better time with the smaller farm radios I've done since, 2 Coronados and 2 Philcos, the latter being a 42-122 (covered in the "Latest Philco Save" thread), and a 40-95. Both are pretty simple circuits and not difficult to power.

I've got an AC supply I built that puts out 1.5V and 90V, but I've also built some battery packs that work great. A trip to Radio Shack will yield everything you need. A project box that will hold 10 9V batteries, battery clips wired in series, and a couple of D cell holders wired in parallel. I also use the 4 pin power connectors they sell for easy exchanging of the battery pack or the power supply.

If you like, at some point I can provide the schematic for the power supply if the group is interesed.

Bill

Sent from my Pentium II on the AT&T Dial Network
#4

The model number I am looking at is a 37-34 on ebay right now.
thanks
Chris
#5

For a 37-34 all you need is 6 volts DC @ 1.3 amps. And it does use a synchronous vibrator.

--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Philco Model 16 wiring question
Thanks Morzh. So it appears I did wire it incorrectly and I have to switch the wires between pins 2 and 4.bobclausen — 09:24 AM
Philco 46-1209 strange behavior
No, it's not a problem, just during certain condition it could show up. Yes, an internal tube short could do that too. ...morzh — 09:13 AM
HiFi (Chifi) tube amp build - but my own design.
You sound guys are never satisfied. :crazy: :clap:RodB — 09:10 AM
HiFi (Chifi) tube amp build - but my own design.
I got some new ceramic octal tube sockets installed and also tried some different coupling caps.  The results:  The go...TV MAN — 08:42 AM
Philco 46-1209 strange behavior
I pulled the tube out and it's shorted from pin 1 to pin 2. I suppose that's the problem...sq65 — 08:12 AM
1949 Motorola 5A9M
bob  Nice work on battery . If you don't. Have terminals i have a few spares  Samsam — 02:12 AM
1949 Motorola 5A9M
hello mr Fixr, for sure !! I have some radios that I need to make some batteries for too. Sincerely richardradiorich — 12:33 AM
1949 Motorola 5A9M
Dittos, sweet b on the battery. Love the "9 Lives" logo, remembered from my childhood. Other neat ones are t...MrFixr55 — 11:24 PM
Philco 46-1209 strange behavior
Hi Morzh, Dunno if the AC EMI caps are an issue. I never liked the concept but never had an issue with these causin...MrFixr55 — 11:21 PM
Philco 46-1209 strange behavior
And no hum without the 7AF7? Not common but I am thinking heater - cathode short. This would introduce hum in this sta...MrFixr55 — 11:14 PM

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

>