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

Modern radio-old controls
#1

I'm probably in the wrong place. I am a newbe with a question. I have a unknown maker '30's style radio head which I am planning to install in a 1936 styled kit-car. The radio head consists of a round tuning indicator located above two knobs. Kinda looks like a Mickey Mouse upside down.

I would like to take a modern cd-radio combination and actually turn it on and off and hopefully tune it using this radio head.

I may be using the wrong term. What I am calling a radio head is a dash mounted remote control for a large radio which I understand was usually located in the trunk of the automobile and connected to the "radio head" with cables similar to speedometer cables.

I could probably put a mechanical switch on the "hot" power line for a radio but tuning and selecting function has me baffled. (I know about as much about electricity as I do spelling)

I thought some modern radio with a detachable face plate might be adaptable to mechanical controls. I would like to have an AM-FM radio with CD and a remote CD player.

Does anyone have any idea how this could be done and which radio cd-player might best lend itself to this type of adaption.

I have considered mounting the radio head on a thin piece of wood directly infront of the modern radio and installing push buttons that make direct contact with the push button controls on the radio but I fear that would destroy the 1930's look I am trying to achieve for my dash.

Thanks for any assistance you may give me. Shiftless3spd
#2

Sounds like an interesting project although I've never heard of anyone actually doing it.

The mechanical linkage from the head could theoretically be used to turn an optical encoder to drive the tuning of a modern radio via some intermediate black box circuit.

I bet it could be done but I don't have enough brains to figure it out! I'm old school. I'd look for an original radio and feed FM/Ipod to it via a little transmitter laying in the seat Icon_crazy
#3

Thanks for the response xray.
Shiftless3spd




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
With regard to the speaker, unless the cone is so brittle that it crumbles as soon as you touch it I would try to repair...Arran — 04:07 AM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
That silver can capacitor is an aluminum electrolytic. You should replace it with an aluminum electrolytic with the valu...RodB — 11:46 PM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Thank you Rodb and Gary for helping with clarification on these capacitors. Other than the Tiny 630volt one I'm not sure...osanders0311 — 10:17 PM
1949 Motorola 5A9M
Hello All; I found the CMB41L down in the basement, it is definitely a 1950-51 model, the capacitors have date codes ...Arran — 07:48 PM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Hi, all the caps I order, other than the electrolytics, are of the 630V rating. No worries on it being too high, and no ...gary rabbitt — 05:46 PM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Hi, there's a lot to consider when designing these circuits so you shouldn't have a lot of concern when replacing caps. ...RodB — 02:03 PM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
I have ordered and received new caps for this radio and hope I've ordered the correct ones. I tried matching them to the...osanders0311 — 11:35 AM
Philco newbie with P-1891-WA console questions
Hello Jeff , Far as the Electrolytic capacitors go here is a list of parts. that will work . I like using Nichicon and...radiorich — 09:50 PM
Philco newbie with P-1891-WA console questions
Well, I've been stumped at trying to get the first of 11 electrolytic capacitors. I got a schematic and have a list of t...Jeffcon — 07:54 PM
Model 80 Antenna Issue?
Thanks Gary and Rod.  I also found an article in the Philco Repair Bench under Service Hints and Tips, about installi...Hamilton — 12:32 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 450 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 449 Guest(s)
Avatar

>