Келесі
- 53:07
- 48 М.
- 1:46:27
- 156 М.
- 00:18
- 13 МЛН
- 10 күн бұрын
- 00:32
- 45 МЛН
- 19 күн бұрын
- 00:46
- 47 МЛН
- 19 күн бұрын
- 00:55
- 93 МЛН
- 14 күн бұрын
- 1:04:24
- 178 М.
- 26:24
- 2,4 М.
- 26:44
- 29 М.
- 47:45
- 103 М.
- 3:54
- 40 МЛН
- 3:24
- 64 М.
- 3:08
- 798 М.
- 3:39
- 330 М.
- 3:29
- 61 М.
Пікірлер: 13
Your first ever console is too cool for words. Those Grundig speakers are incredible! You get to work on some fantastically rare, complicated , and sophisticated vintage stuff! That cracked potmetal disk might break further in the future and jamb up the FM part. Might have gone with trying to wipe on some JB weld on it just to stabilize it and keep it in one piece. That was one hell of a restoration job. Thanks for showing it.
That is the neatest turntable I've ever seen! You can probably could replace the little rubber wheel on the cart with a pinch roller !
Had a Siemens hi-fi much like your Saba with the very same Dual turntable. Was so impressed with it's unique engineering that I own a Dual CS5000 now.
Holy Moley so much Caps in that baby! The Germans sure know how to build Electronics!
Great work, Steve!
Increíble, un magnífico trabajo. Enhorabuena.
You sir, are a genius!
Hitler probably used the same exact stereo in his Bunker. Him and Eva Brawn would put on record and slow dance in their Bunker. 😂
To my understanding for that cartridge switch, in Europe 'M' setting was for microgroove (mono or stereo etc) and the 'N' was for _normal_ or 78 groves - kinda strange but the UK equivalent they used 'S' for _standard_ (78s).
@SteveScarlet
18 күн бұрын
Great info!
It goes to show you things were advance even in the 50's
Too bad that tuner clutch is so complicated... otherwise you could 3d print a replacement for it...
Wish I was your Neighbor.......