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

Wood under photo finish
#1

What type of wood is under the photo finish? Is it suitable for staining or is a veneer required?

Thank you
#2

It depends on the year and model, and where the faux finish is. Usually what you will find is a cheap species of hardwood like tulip poplar, beech, maple, alder, gum, or something similar, that is tight grained with next to no figuring. basically what they would call "paint grade" now. Philco used a lot of it in the front panels of their lower end models from 1937-38, especially the 1937s, and used a version of it called "Philcote" right into the late 1940s on some sets. Veneer will work well on a flat panel, but is a lot more difficult on a molding with a tight radius, like a grill bar, there you would have to replicate the grain in some way either with paint or a decal. Brand Z is the worst offender for faux finishes, the entire front on many of their consoles was nothing but a faux finish, even into the early 1950s. 
Regards
Arran
#3

Thanks Arran, that's what I guessed.
#4

About the only thing that will colour the wood under that faux finish is some sort of wood dye, oil stain won't do much of anything. I guess I'm lucky in that most Canadian built radios, other then some Philco models, used real veneer, the exceptions being things like grill bars, or trim work, that was impractical to cover with veneer.
Regards
Arran




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
The list of my radio & TV collection!
Peter; I found an old thread on the ARF, I was wrong about when Rogers took over DeForest Crosley, it looks like it wa...Arran — 06:15 AM
The list of my radio & TV collection!
Thank you Arran, this is very interesting information. With your permission, I will definitely use it when I make a vide...RadioSvit — 04:14 AM
The list of my radio & TV collection!
Peter; For a start your DeForest Crosley 6D632 was a 1936-37 model, and I believe it had six tubes, and 3 wave bands,...Arran — 03:07 AM
AES type of Battery Eliminator has hum in B+
This is interesting, they actually designed the B+ side with some form of voltage regulation, I think? Most of the B+ su...Arran — 02:21 AM
AES type of Battery Eliminator has hum in B+
They are trying to use a regulator. Essentially it is an LDO schematic. LDOs are supposed to greatly reduce ripple, so t...morzh — 12:11 AM
AES type of Battery Eliminator has hum in B+
So, I just built a 90 volt 40ma battery eliminator for a farm radio and had to use 1000 mfd for the input filter cap to ...RodB — 10:31 PM
AES type of Battery Eliminator has hum in B+
Caps of 1,000 uF 250V are about $7 in Mouser. C1 could be increased. A NTC inrush limiter could be employed to limit t...morzh — 10:24 PM
AES type of Battery Eliminator has hum in B+
Bruce B — 09:41 PM
AES type of Battery Eliminator has hum in B+
Bruce Could you post the schematic if this power supply?morzh — 09:31 PM
AES type of Battery Eliminator has hum in B+
Hello All, I have built a battery eliminator using the most popular AES K101a. Using plans and all the AES parts  order...Bruce B — 09:27 PM

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

>