I just bought this Philco chairside,and have not taken the chassis out yet,so I don;'t know if it is a
model 38-14C 38-15 or a 38-15C.
I like the style and it should clean up nice after I do the chassis and strip the cabinet.
Dan in Calgary
I took the chassis out and everything is original,even the tubes.
All of them were very good.
After bringing it up on the variac it plays good with out any hum.
I will replace all the caps, but leave the old electrolytics in place [disconnected].
Is there a replacement for the thin metal gold dial that has the station numbers on it?
This one is very thin, and fragile.Here is a photo
Dan in Calgary
The dial looks to be in good condition. If the foil is not badly torn I would leave it alone. With that being said if you can put a thin piece plastic between the pointer and the foil that would be good. Radiodazes sells a replacement but it not as nice as the original. I have the console version 38-17F https://philcoradio.com/gallery2/1938c/#Model_38-17F and back about 40 yrs ago I had that same chairside but bcb only and push button tuning. It was 39- something. Good player as is 38-15 and good sw coverage too.
When my pals were reading comic books
I was down in the basement in my dad's
workshop. Perusing his Sam's Photofoacts
Vol 1-50 admiring the old set and trying to
figure out what all those squiggly meant.
Circa 1966
Now I think I've got!
The one that is on the radio is not torn or ripped but it is pretty thin. I have taken it off and kept it flat.
I will be putting it back on after I do the cabinet.
Thanks for the information
Dan in Calgary
When I recap this radio do I have to replace #37 which are two .01 caps across the power input. If I do what voltage should I use.
These caps are in a Bakelite block
This radio has all the original Philco tubes, and has not been messed with . Right now it plays very good with no hum, but I will replace the caps.
Another thing on the dial is that you can repair small tears in the foil. The foil is stamped after it's put onto the cardboard. So the cardboard has the wavy patterns in it too. You can find gold foil at the hobby shop. Carefully slip it under the edges of the tear. Use a small roller to press the new foil into the pattern in the cardboard. Make a nice repair as long as there is no print involved.
I would have repaired in this fashion but the cardboard had gotten wet and was mess up.
When my pals were reading comic books
I was down in the basement in my dad's
workshop. Perusing his Sam's Photofoacts
Vol 1-50 admiring the old set and trying to
figure out what all those squiggly meant.
Circa 1966
Now I think I've got!
I just ordered some caps from Just radios, but I didn't order any of those caps.
Are they marked different; such as having X1 or Y2 labeled on the cap itself? with the voltage.
What would I look for in ordering them?
sorry for all the questions, but I have not used these caps before.
Dan in Calgary
They're a disc type capacitor, usually blue or yellow, with very fine print on them. I usually order them at Justradios if I have a larger order going in, but when I only need a few things I get them from Digi-Key for about 60 cents each. Digi will ship USPS for ~$5 as long as it's under 14oz. The last time I ordered I bought Kemet C981U103MZVDBA7317.
Also, I originally planned to use a 3 position (middle grounded) terminal strip to mount the two caps, but I ultimately decided to scrape the goop and caps out of the original block and then mounted/soldered the new safety caps inside the block. For me it was more about saving space and not having to find a new, safe mounting hole for the terminal strip. But of course it also looks more original in the end.
safety cap:
(This post was last modified: 09-22-2022, 01:06 PM by jtiner.)
If you scroll pretty far down on JustRadio's order sheet you will see X1/Y2 caps that look like the blue disc that jtiner mentioned. There are also Y2 and X2 caps that are a yellow square shape. I just buy the X1/Y2 0.01uF caps.