Diagnosis and Repair Vintage Zenith Transistor Radio
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 166
@proudsnowtiger4 жыл бұрын
"Always take a few minutes and just sit down and look at the thing through a good magnifying glass and familiarise yourself with what's going on" - which is not only good advice for troubleshooting, it's immensely pleasurable to read the set's engineering, the choice of components, the layout, the artifacts of aging. Fault-finding has its own aesthetics, and one of the reasons I love this channel is how well that's communicated with such dry passion.
@zx8401ztv
4 жыл бұрын
I agree, i love his sharp sarcasm as well as his vast knowledge.
@ver64
4 жыл бұрын
Couldn’t agree more with both...excellent channel, I ALWAYS learn something. Thank you.
@Discretesignals4 жыл бұрын
I tell you one thing. If, I was ever shipped wrecked on a deserted island, I'd want Shango there to make a coconut radio.
@hestheMaster
4 жыл бұрын
Without Gilligan and in place of the Professor. Of course we would need the movie star! Hubba Hubba.
@senilyDeluxe
4 жыл бұрын
And when he completes it and turns it on, all that comes out of the speaker is Blebe blebe blep! :-D
@paulseymour
4 жыл бұрын
Yes but can shango066 construct a battery charger using coconut shells, salt water, pennies and hairpins to recharge the batteries in the radio like the Professor did? And I bet if the radio on Gilligan's Island lost a transistor, the Professor would have been able to whip up a replacement using part of a sea shell, germanium harvested from a cave and some hairpins.
@jrocco364 жыл бұрын
The dot above the 100 on the FM dial denotes the FM radio station 99.5 WEFM Zenith owned in Chicago . The call letters stood for E.F. McDonald president of Zenith Radio
@TheRadiogeek
4 жыл бұрын
Very interesting.
@waltschannel7465
4 жыл бұрын
That is a neat artifact!
@vcv6560
5 ай бұрын
@jrocco36 Nice trivia to put in the back of my pocket. It made me run over to check my Royal 3000 and 7000 it was present on BOTH, however my R7000-2 (the final TO) didn't have the marker.
@TheEPROM94 жыл бұрын
I still love how you going to detail on the trobleshooting proccess, no one elce does it like this which makes your video super valuable.
@mellewallen48323 жыл бұрын
I love how you diagnose the radios,and the dry wit comments too !!!
@JSF08644 жыл бұрын
Yay, a new Shango video! I've been watching your older videos between these new ones, thank you for your efforts!
@johnvaldez88304 жыл бұрын
You just can't beat having that factory Zenith manual on hand. What a life saver. Sometimes you just can't believe a transistor test unit; then again, these old radios get multiple issues over time and finally just choke. Superb video and fun repair. You should try those other transistors, I think they would be better.
@zx8401ztv4 жыл бұрын
Transistor stray capacitance, critical at high frequency resonant circuits. Zenith made some really nice looking radios.
@jeromegrzelak8236
4 жыл бұрын
note the spkr and the case made it sound gooood
@jeromegrzelak82364 жыл бұрын
Worked at Zenith in 1962 i got this radio still works the service manul is sweet fb om
@mjg2634 жыл бұрын
What a great little radio, back when Zenith was still Zenith. Love that detailed factory manual, that’s like what you would expect with a build-it-yourself Heathkit or something. Nice fix, thanks for taking us along!
@keithbrandaw72294 жыл бұрын
Very good video Shangoo , as always ! My all time favorite was the dump find Zenith 1000 . I like the old stuff too tube sets and alike.
@mikemcmanus76654 жыл бұрын
Great job on this zenith Royal 810 AM/FM. I enjoy watching you figure out what is going on with these good old radios. Thank you.
@deanthompson37414 жыл бұрын
It's alive,it's alive....Sir I sure enjoy watching your videos. I love radio but know nothing about fixing them. But to see a radio resurrected to life is all good. Thank You for your time and skill.
@ChristiRich4 жыл бұрын
I find these videos so relaxing and satisfying. It's ASMR for nerds.
@moisesalexandrewielckensci3237 Жыл бұрын
Your videos are always a great learning experience. I always try to watch.
@MrBillmcminn4 жыл бұрын
FM amplifier and converter both dead or committed suicide because of the mumble rap on FM radio in LA
@jeromegrzelak8236
4 жыл бұрын
that cracked me up
@markmarkofkane81674 жыл бұрын
You removed a thorn from the lion's paw. Lol. Great diagnosis and fix!
@scottbrady74994 жыл бұрын
holy twerkulation, Batman! ..as a shango066 viewer, and very familiar with the apparently mythical ease this dude seems to make shit from back in the day actually function, as it was originally intended to- i became a strong believer in his abilities. good stuff. really amazing. naw, that's all BS, i watch religiously to hear the voice of an individual, who can speak their own mind, on a variety subjects.
@hestheMaster4 жыл бұрын
Love the two for a week repair videos Shango. Hope you don't run out of stuff to fix during this extended pandemic lockdown!
@JerryEricsson4 жыл бұрын
Very cool, I always learn something from watching your videos. I began to watch them for entertainment, and the learning experience. Now I watch them to get my mind off my wife, who is dying from cancer. My daughter and I are caring for her at home rather then putting her in a nursing home, where we would be separated from her for the rest of her life because of the China Virus crap. Being disabled myself, I am usually in a quite a lot of pain but she has cared for me for so long, the very least I can do is help her all that I can. Again thanks for the break I do love your sense of humor and the way you teach.
@snogcel14 жыл бұрын
I must be brain damaged at this point, but I greatly enjoy watching Shango repair all this ancient stuff! I was a TV repair guy in the 70's, so it's a walk down memory lane to relive digging around in the innards of this old stuff in Shango's videos. On this old Zenith radio, ya might try tweaking the FM trimmers on the tuning capacitor to get the high end of the dial to track more closely - just a thought!
@JerryEricsson4 жыл бұрын
Years ago, back when Christ was a Corporal, I was a patrolman on a small police department in North Dakota. Now up on the high plains, we experience some of the most wicked thunderstorms on the planet and late at night the only thing to break the monotony of the town where everyone has gone to sleep except the cop and the crooks, is the AM Radio. Those Radio's served a couple of purposes in the summer months, one to keep us awake with either some great Classic Rock and Roll, or some talk jock who tells us his outlook on the happenings of the day, that and the sound of an approaching thunderstorm. Funny, when those storms get close, you could hear the wind up of a lightning strike on some stations, a sort of whinnnnnne CRACKLE and THUNDER would follow usually with a cloud to ground bolt that, should you happen to be looking in the right direction would cause a bit of light blindness sometimes lasting up to a minute. Got so I began closing my eyes when I heard that wind up because I knew the strike would be too near for the good of my night vision. To quote an old British comedy cop, "the life of a police man is not a happy lot.
@andyjackson99904 жыл бұрын
This is a Shango first. Radio repair in a thunderstorm! Loving the new release schedule. Thanks for all the informative and entertaining videos, Shango.
@brianmoore54984 жыл бұрын
i like that little zenith. very cool little radio. super sixties style i know these videos are a pain to make but, especially these days they are truly very very much appreciated. thank you kindly.
@tiporari4 жыл бұрын
You should build a basic radio from scratch. Maybe not starting with a rusty razorblade AM, but whack a few off the shelf parts together on a breadboard and build one up without using a receiver IC. I think that would be fun to watch, and you have the skills.
@teacfan10804 жыл бұрын
Nice stash of transistors you have on hand, always ready for a repair. Heard a little thunder in the background and heard the lightning as well, broadcasted over the radio of course!
@SarahRWilson
3 жыл бұрын
I see lightning flashes and hear static crashes!
@emmagarner25194 жыл бұрын
Glad to see your still alright shango.
@JerryEricsson3 жыл бұрын
Cool man, you bring good things back to life!
@garp324 жыл бұрын
Yay! Almost as good as Saturday matinee =) Thanks Shango
@DanafoxyVixen4 жыл бұрын
shango066 doesn't always listen to the radio.. but when he does its always distorted at maximum volume
@MrJohndoakes
3 жыл бұрын
Got to drown out the light airplanes buzzing his neighborhood.
@maynardcat3 жыл бұрын
Your videos are always so interesting, I just bought a radio exactly like this at the flea market a few days ago, I didn't expect it to work, but it somewhat did for a short time. The volume control was hit and miss, I sprayed it with DeOxit, that helped a little, since the knob was lose I thought the intermittent volume was due to a bad connection. After taking it apart and tightening a bolt around the volume control it made no difference, and I saw no lose connections and the intermittent got worse. If I pressed in an area around the volume control it came on for a short time, but kept getting worse now nothing will play AM or FM, but I do hear a hiss in the speaker. I've not attempted to heat up connection points thinking there is possibly a crack or bad solder connection,. I put it back on the shelf for know, I can repair some things, but I'm not a good savvy tech guy like you, wish I was ,I'm afraid I might make it worse.
@bob78724 жыл бұрын
That was an interesting one. Love your videos.
@feedle4 жыл бұрын
My dad had one of those radios when I was growing up in the 70s in West Anaheim. KFI would always blow the shit out of the selectivity at the lower end of the band when we were within 5 miles of their transmitter...
@damoviecreator46734 жыл бұрын
That's such a cool radio. Looks solid
@garymckee88574 жыл бұрын
My radio history lesson for today. Thanks
@mlpreinbowfluttersrycutebo68184 жыл бұрын
Awesome. Reapir. Radio. I. Love. Your. Chanel. I. Am. Very. Big. Fan. Of. Your. Chanel. I. Love. Vintange. Stuff. To
@goyadressunofficial4 жыл бұрын
Unmatched pairs of audio output transistors don't bring me flowers...
@hql4004 жыл бұрын
wonderful ! If a whisker from emitter to case, the base voltage would be low, too, the B-E-Diode was bad... The GT313 is the best choice, I have very good experience with this in VHF-stages.
@renejansen59394 жыл бұрын
I Really like the look of those American radio's!
@koyomineko86554 жыл бұрын
Good job from Japan. 😺📻
@michaelrobertson5754 жыл бұрын
A very good fault diagnosis and repair of the discrete component electronics there Sir!I wonder if we might get back to that old Sony Telly soon?
@Denvermorgan20004 жыл бұрын
Thats a really nice design.
@WC01254 жыл бұрын
Another great video segment. Zenith must have had some relationship with Hiatachi. The station seeking Royal B-77 from 1971 is made in Japan and loaded with Hitachi factory parts.
@jeromegrzelak8236
4 жыл бұрын
say what
@connorm955
Жыл бұрын
I really don't know. At the end of the day it's just a capacitor.
@WC0125
Жыл бұрын
@@jeromegrzelak8236 Yes. The radio seems to have been made by Hitachi given the components.
@robinsattahip23763 жыл бұрын
That's interesting, the RF transistor tested good but was bad. Learned something useful today.
@vcv6560
5 ай бұрын
My guess is those little testers are DC based, so they check Beta rather than hfe. Being used in RF its easy to imagine the GBW (gain-bandwidth) is likely 1MHz on those old germanium growing tin-whiskers or whatever age induced failure modes they follow.
@Hunter-xy6qq4 жыл бұрын
SHANGO66 IS THE COOLEST TV REPAIR GUY 😎
@jdmccorful
4 жыл бұрын
No no, he's the Tranistor Radio guy during Wuhan Party days.
Thanks for all these posts during the chinUNEASE virus If you could, can you work on a vacuum tube tv soon?!? I enjoy watching the tube stuff over transistor stuff, as whenever I watch your videos I always learn something new even though I don't have the same models! Take care Shane! Stay safe.
@danvanvoorst73294 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Enjoyed!
@jrs00073 жыл бұрын
I remember reading once about why Zenith (and others) had different factory part numbers when the generic number was the same. Early high frequency germaniums (made to be the same) actually had different characteristics when operated at high frequencies. The factories chose the ones best suited for various circuits and assigned a unique part number. It's not much different from choosing the best TV tuner tubes (of the same number) back in the day when rural folks needed an outdoor antenna to get 2 or 3 channels.
@tarstarkusz4 жыл бұрын
200 hours on 4 AA cells (assuming 3000mah cells), not bad at all. Good alkaline AA cells were .39 a piece in the 1965 radio shack catalog, which were a bit overpriced. Still, that is only $1.56. Their regular carbon-zinc cells were $0,10 (when bought in 20 pack). But back then CZ cells were better and would run a lot longer than the cz cells made today sold at the Dollar Tree. 10 years before this you could still buy tube based farm radios that ran for like 5 hours on an expensive ($5 in 1950s) battery. The 1965 Radio Shack catalog lists a 90v B battery at 3.95 (23k188) and an A battery for between a dollar and a dollar 60.
@craignehring4 жыл бұрын
A chrome plated die cast radio. We will never see anything like that again, not that we need to. Nice resurrection shango066. My parents has a Royal 500. That was a nice radio. Zenith did usually sweat the details and didn't cheap out on anything.
@dktr24 жыл бұрын
Amaizing sensitivity
@weerobot4 жыл бұрын
Service Manual that Rare..lol...Ground is Positive Wow...that Circuit Board spaghetti..lol...Great Work...!!!
@danishnative95554 жыл бұрын
Looks a lot like the Radio Shack Patrolman 12-629A. See if you can find one of those.
@johnnydxer4 жыл бұрын
5:20 - Corrodeedoodle
@One-Crazy-Cat3 жыл бұрын
Came for the radio repair stayed for the “boys of summer”
@mrjason93824 жыл бұрын
Thanks for shareing
@vcv65605 ай бұрын
Considering how long Zenith resisted going to PCB, this radio from 1965 they should have followed this approach when they did the Royal 7000 just a few years later. Sometimes the best decision gets missed - for no obvious reason.
@bones007able4 жыл бұрын
Got one just like it!
@russredfern1674 жыл бұрын
Almost made it to the end without propaganda. That's pretty good.
@jamienoel4 жыл бұрын
You're up bright and early.
@tomcarlson39134 жыл бұрын
I thought the punchline of 'Boys of Summer' being played during the Kung Flu quarry'n'teen is that there really is "nobody on the road, nobody on the beach"...
@cjmarsh5044 жыл бұрын
Deadhead sticker on a Cadillac!😊😊
@dedmazai92123 жыл бұрын
29:00 An interesting technical solution .. !! If my eyes don't fail, I can see the aluminum cores in the coils ... Not high frequency ferrite or brass ..?! The last time I saw this in the drums of the channel switch of a tube TV .. I see it for the first time in a radio receiver ..)) As a matter of fact, I did not have such a receiver to see this before ..))
@user-jz6qg5pp1q2 жыл бұрын
Respect !
@Martin-io4wc4 жыл бұрын
Hey, the air plains are flying again. :-)
@mzflighter69054 жыл бұрын
What do you do with all af those repaired radios?
@robinsattahip62694 жыл бұрын
So the RF Amp tested good even though it was really bad? I have never seen that before in almost 50 years of messing with electronics. THAT REALLY DESERVES MORE ATTENTION!
@jdmccorful
4 жыл бұрын
Expect the un expected and you will be a survivor.
@waltschannel7465
4 жыл бұрын
Look at the "diagram" that the tester presents. It looked like a diode, IIRC, even though it showed gain. That's a tester SW fault as far as I'm concerned.
@scharkalvin4 жыл бұрын
You probably tested that rf transistor with the case lead floating. Bet you had a case wisker short, and if you'd have cut the case lead in the radio it might have worked. The Ruskie's work FB though.
@Elfnetdesigns4 жыл бұрын
@8:04 - That manual has a typo: 88 - 108 KC; should be 88 - 108 MC
@OverUnity77344 жыл бұрын
16:52 Can you flash pop the whisker out like I used to do with my NiCads ?
@azariayehezkel90644 жыл бұрын
What about sony kv? Found the schematic? Part 2?
@jp0407594 жыл бұрын
Thanx. I really enjoy watching you work trouble on this stuff. Did you get invited to Pelosi's house for ice-cream???
@tebbi674 жыл бұрын
You can rejuvenate germanium Transistors with whiskers in it when you put it at 50-80 degrees celsius in a oven for 40 minutes.
@God-CDXX4 жыл бұрын
if you use a diode to jump that switch you can manetane the full function of the DC jack
@SarahRWilson
3 жыл бұрын
He'd need a schottky diode, something like a 1N5820. A regular silicon diode will cost about 0.7V from the battery voltage.
@God-CDXX
3 жыл бұрын
@@SarahRWilson 1N5820 is $0.20 that is no prob
@raymondcourtois674 жыл бұрын
Hmm, that's not the first time music that came out while I was in high school or college was on the oldies station.. And my reaction was hey, why is that on the oldies station?!?!?
@jonathaneastwood2927
2 жыл бұрын
Just getting old mate!
@iainoggy4 жыл бұрын
Does it not pop crackle masterpony
@guitarpro2484 жыл бұрын
Also, I've been thinking about making a similar channel about working on strictly tube stuff, would you have any tips for someone starting a new channel??
@shango066
4 жыл бұрын
lots of work, lots of established channels doing tube stuff. what do you want out of it...follow your heart
@jquest43
4 жыл бұрын
@@shango066 can you fix my o3 ozone machine from 15 years ago..mint condition..I live in La and can pay jquest43@gmail.com
@williammitchem82744 жыл бұрын
Well.....when are you going to build a Interocitor ???? With Bead condenser model #AB-619.
@X-OR_4 жыл бұрын
FM (No Static At All)
@hadireg4 жыл бұрын
❤👍👍👍
@55benchguy4 жыл бұрын
So , Where can I get one of those transistor testers. Mine failed years ago , and I like the one that you are using. Please advise ? ( By the way -- ALWAYS Great Videos ! Thank you for them. It is making life sitting at home , much better. )
@quantumleap359
4 жыл бұрын
There's a ton of them on Ebay. Cheap, most all of them are the same, mine runs on a 9 volt.
@55benchguy
4 жыл бұрын
@@quantumleap359 Cool , I look. Do you have a brand name or model ?
@waltschannel7465
4 жыл бұрын
@@55benchguy There are no brand names on those tester units. Probably cloned from a single unit.
@rickjohnson16324 жыл бұрын
👍👍✌️😎
@geoepi3219754 жыл бұрын
You should make an alignment in rf stages
@LakeNipissing4 жыл бұрын
Totally amusing how cold war era American made radios can now be brought back to life with Russian transistors!
@zzquantum84462 жыл бұрын
Прикольная шкала! СССР спас Америку транзисторами! )))
@call5sam3 жыл бұрын
Where did you get your translated Russian spec sheets?
@MiamiMillionaire4 жыл бұрын
👍
@orange703834 жыл бұрын
That looked like one of them robota hawks keeping an eye from the sky on unauthorized free-range humans.
@ugurylmaz76664 жыл бұрын
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
@larry82534 жыл бұрын
Am I the only one who thought the lightning noise was cool? 😎 LOL
@OverUnity77344 жыл бұрын
22:27 Is that solder suppose to be a joke ?
@jpolar3944 жыл бұрын
Watching this whole video was great except for the very last part when you were tuning the stations and you hit a commercial that had the phrase DOT COM in it. Man, I just hate that. I'm sick and tired of hearing that phrase every few seconds either over the radio or on the tv.
@QuadMochaMatti
4 жыл бұрын
The late Jimmy Smith, legendary Jazzman and Master of the Mighty B-3 Hammond, cut both an album and a track titled "Dot Com Blues," at about the time of the Dot Com bubble bust. He was ahead of the game when it comes to disillusionment with that nonsense.
@jdmccorful
4 жыл бұрын
Don't forget the shoutout for Gordon Goodwin's band ,I guess KJAZZ.
@jrs0007
3 жыл бұрын
What I hate is "coming up"
@nicolaheyesheyes46324 жыл бұрын
Shango is it for sale
@_Ramen-Vac_4 жыл бұрын
My brother had a bust-me-sticker on a Monte Carlo lol
@DAVIDGREGORYKERR3 жыл бұрын
Could be the driver transistor.
@briang.72062 жыл бұрын
"Dead Head" for a long time I didn't know what that meant.
@johnnytacokleinschmidt5154 жыл бұрын
27:34 Mrs. Miller on the radio airwaves?! Well alright....
@frankwhelan17154 жыл бұрын
''Mains power socket will never be used''what if someone else gets the radio ?
@robertp72094 жыл бұрын
So many times, seems like it’s mechanical component failures.
Пікірлер: 166
"Always take a few minutes and just sit down and look at the thing through a good magnifying glass and familiarise yourself with what's going on" - which is not only good advice for troubleshooting, it's immensely pleasurable to read the set's engineering, the choice of components, the layout, the artifacts of aging. Fault-finding has its own aesthetics, and one of the reasons I love this channel is how well that's communicated with such dry passion.
@zx8401ztv
4 жыл бұрын
I agree, i love his sharp sarcasm as well as his vast knowledge.
@ver64
4 жыл бұрын
Couldn’t agree more with both...excellent channel, I ALWAYS learn something. Thank you.
I tell you one thing. If, I was ever shipped wrecked on a deserted island, I'd want Shango there to make a coconut radio.
@hestheMaster
4 жыл бұрын
Without Gilligan and in place of the Professor. Of course we would need the movie star! Hubba Hubba.
@senilyDeluxe
4 жыл бұрын
And when he completes it and turns it on, all that comes out of the speaker is Blebe blebe blep! :-D
@paulseymour
4 жыл бұрын
Yes but can shango066 construct a battery charger using coconut shells, salt water, pennies and hairpins to recharge the batteries in the radio like the Professor did? And I bet if the radio on Gilligan's Island lost a transistor, the Professor would have been able to whip up a replacement using part of a sea shell, germanium harvested from a cave and some hairpins.
The dot above the 100 on the FM dial denotes the FM radio station 99.5 WEFM Zenith owned in Chicago . The call letters stood for E.F. McDonald president of Zenith Radio
@TheRadiogeek
4 жыл бұрын
Very interesting.
@waltschannel7465
4 жыл бұрын
That is a neat artifact!
@vcv6560
5 ай бұрын
@jrocco36 Nice trivia to put in the back of my pocket. It made me run over to check my Royal 3000 and 7000 it was present on BOTH, however my R7000-2 (the final TO) didn't have the marker.
I still love how you going to detail on the trobleshooting proccess, no one elce does it like this which makes your video super valuable.
I love how you diagnose the radios,and the dry wit comments too !!!
Yay, a new Shango video! I've been watching your older videos between these new ones, thank you for your efforts!
You just can't beat having that factory Zenith manual on hand. What a life saver. Sometimes you just can't believe a transistor test unit; then again, these old radios get multiple issues over time and finally just choke. Superb video and fun repair. You should try those other transistors, I think they would be better.
Transistor stray capacitance, critical at high frequency resonant circuits. Zenith made some really nice looking radios.
@jeromegrzelak8236
4 жыл бұрын
note the spkr and the case made it sound gooood
Worked at Zenith in 1962 i got this radio still works the service manul is sweet fb om
What a great little radio, back when Zenith was still Zenith. Love that detailed factory manual, that’s like what you would expect with a build-it-yourself Heathkit or something. Nice fix, thanks for taking us along!
Very good video Shangoo , as always ! My all time favorite was the dump find Zenith 1000 . I like the old stuff too tube sets and alike.
Great job on this zenith Royal 810 AM/FM. I enjoy watching you figure out what is going on with these good old radios. Thank you.
It's alive,it's alive....Sir I sure enjoy watching your videos. I love radio but know nothing about fixing them. But to see a radio resurrected to life is all good. Thank You for your time and skill.
I find these videos so relaxing and satisfying. It's ASMR for nerds.
Your videos are always a great learning experience. I always try to watch.
FM amplifier and converter both dead or committed suicide because of the mumble rap on FM radio in LA
@jeromegrzelak8236
4 жыл бұрын
that cracked me up
You removed a thorn from the lion's paw. Lol. Great diagnosis and fix!
holy twerkulation, Batman! ..as a shango066 viewer, and very familiar with the apparently mythical ease this dude seems to make shit from back in the day actually function, as it was originally intended to- i became a strong believer in his abilities. good stuff. really amazing. naw, that's all BS, i watch religiously to hear the voice of an individual, who can speak their own mind, on a variety subjects.
Love the two for a week repair videos Shango. Hope you don't run out of stuff to fix during this extended pandemic lockdown!
Very cool, I always learn something from watching your videos. I began to watch them for entertainment, and the learning experience. Now I watch them to get my mind off my wife, who is dying from cancer. My daughter and I are caring for her at home rather then putting her in a nursing home, where we would be separated from her for the rest of her life because of the China Virus crap. Being disabled myself, I am usually in a quite a lot of pain but she has cared for me for so long, the very least I can do is help her all that I can. Again thanks for the break I do love your sense of humor and the way you teach.
I must be brain damaged at this point, but I greatly enjoy watching Shango repair all this ancient stuff! I was a TV repair guy in the 70's, so it's a walk down memory lane to relive digging around in the innards of this old stuff in Shango's videos. On this old Zenith radio, ya might try tweaking the FM trimmers on the tuning capacitor to get the high end of the dial to track more closely - just a thought!
Years ago, back when Christ was a Corporal, I was a patrolman on a small police department in North Dakota. Now up on the high plains, we experience some of the most wicked thunderstorms on the planet and late at night the only thing to break the monotony of the town where everyone has gone to sleep except the cop and the crooks, is the AM Radio. Those Radio's served a couple of purposes in the summer months, one to keep us awake with either some great Classic Rock and Roll, or some talk jock who tells us his outlook on the happenings of the day, that and the sound of an approaching thunderstorm. Funny, when those storms get close, you could hear the wind up of a lightning strike on some stations, a sort of whinnnnnne CRACKLE and THUNDER would follow usually with a cloud to ground bolt that, should you happen to be looking in the right direction would cause a bit of light blindness sometimes lasting up to a minute. Got so I began closing my eyes when I heard that wind up because I knew the strike would be too near for the good of my night vision. To quote an old British comedy cop, "the life of a police man is not a happy lot.
This is a Shango first. Radio repair in a thunderstorm! Loving the new release schedule. Thanks for all the informative and entertaining videos, Shango.
i like that little zenith. very cool little radio. super sixties style i know these videos are a pain to make but, especially these days they are truly very very much appreciated. thank you kindly.
You should build a basic radio from scratch. Maybe not starting with a rusty razorblade AM, but whack a few off the shelf parts together on a breadboard and build one up without using a receiver IC. I think that would be fun to watch, and you have the skills.
Nice stash of transistors you have on hand, always ready for a repair. Heard a little thunder in the background and heard the lightning as well, broadcasted over the radio of course!
@SarahRWilson
3 жыл бұрын
I see lightning flashes and hear static crashes!
Glad to see your still alright shango.
Cool man, you bring good things back to life!
Yay! Almost as good as Saturday matinee =) Thanks Shango
shango066 doesn't always listen to the radio.. but when he does its always distorted at maximum volume
@MrJohndoakes
3 жыл бұрын
Got to drown out the light airplanes buzzing his neighborhood.
Your videos are always so interesting, I just bought a radio exactly like this at the flea market a few days ago, I didn't expect it to work, but it somewhat did for a short time. The volume control was hit and miss, I sprayed it with DeOxit, that helped a little, since the knob was lose I thought the intermittent volume was due to a bad connection. After taking it apart and tightening a bolt around the volume control it made no difference, and I saw no lose connections and the intermittent got worse. If I pressed in an area around the volume control it came on for a short time, but kept getting worse now nothing will play AM or FM, but I do hear a hiss in the speaker. I've not attempted to heat up connection points thinking there is possibly a crack or bad solder connection,. I put it back on the shelf for know, I can repair some things, but I'm not a good savvy tech guy like you, wish I was ,I'm afraid I might make it worse.
That was an interesting one. Love your videos.
My dad had one of those radios when I was growing up in the 70s in West Anaheim. KFI would always blow the shit out of the selectivity at the lower end of the band when we were within 5 miles of their transmitter...
That's such a cool radio. Looks solid
My radio history lesson for today. Thanks
Awesome. Reapir. Radio. I. Love. Your. Chanel. I. Am. Very. Big. Fan. Of. Your. Chanel. I. Love. Vintange. Stuff. To
Unmatched pairs of audio output transistors don't bring me flowers...
wonderful ! If a whisker from emitter to case, the base voltage would be low, too, the B-E-Diode was bad... The GT313 is the best choice, I have very good experience with this in VHF-stages.
I Really like the look of those American radio's!
Good job from Japan. 😺📻
A very good fault diagnosis and repair of the discrete component electronics there Sir!I wonder if we might get back to that old Sony Telly soon?
Thats a really nice design.
Another great video segment. Zenith must have had some relationship with Hiatachi. The station seeking Royal B-77 from 1971 is made in Japan and loaded with Hitachi factory parts.
@jeromegrzelak8236
4 жыл бұрын
say what
@connorm955
Жыл бұрын
I really don't know. At the end of the day it's just a capacitor.
@WC0125
Жыл бұрын
@@jeromegrzelak8236 Yes. The radio seems to have been made by Hitachi given the components.
That's interesting, the RF transistor tested good but was bad. Learned something useful today.
@vcv6560
5 ай бұрын
My guess is those little testers are DC based, so they check Beta rather than hfe. Being used in RF its easy to imagine the GBW (gain-bandwidth) is likely 1MHz on those old germanium growing tin-whiskers or whatever age induced failure modes they follow.
SHANGO66 IS THE COOLEST TV REPAIR GUY 😎
@jdmccorful
4 жыл бұрын
No no, he's the Tranistor Radio guy during Wuhan Party days.
Helloy Shango!!!...Very good- ГТ313А (Russian)!!...100%!!!
Thanks for all these posts during the chinUNEASE virus If you could, can you work on a vacuum tube tv soon?!? I enjoy watching the tube stuff over transistor stuff, as whenever I watch your videos I always learn something new even though I don't have the same models! Take care Shane! Stay safe.
Thank you! Enjoyed!
I remember reading once about why Zenith (and others) had different factory part numbers when the generic number was the same. Early high frequency germaniums (made to be the same) actually had different characteristics when operated at high frequencies. The factories chose the ones best suited for various circuits and assigned a unique part number. It's not much different from choosing the best TV tuner tubes (of the same number) back in the day when rural folks needed an outdoor antenna to get 2 or 3 channels.
200 hours on 4 AA cells (assuming 3000mah cells), not bad at all. Good alkaline AA cells were .39 a piece in the 1965 radio shack catalog, which were a bit overpriced. Still, that is only $1.56. Their regular carbon-zinc cells were $0,10 (when bought in 20 pack). But back then CZ cells were better and would run a lot longer than the cz cells made today sold at the Dollar Tree. 10 years before this you could still buy tube based farm radios that ran for like 5 hours on an expensive ($5 in 1950s) battery. The 1965 Radio Shack catalog lists a 90v B battery at 3.95 (23k188) and an A battery for between a dollar and a dollar 60.
A chrome plated die cast radio. We will never see anything like that again, not that we need to. Nice resurrection shango066. My parents has a Royal 500. That was a nice radio. Zenith did usually sweat the details and didn't cheap out on anything.
Amaizing sensitivity
Service Manual that Rare..lol...Ground is Positive Wow...that Circuit Board spaghetti..lol...Great Work...!!!
Looks a lot like the Radio Shack Patrolman 12-629A. See if you can find one of those.
5:20 - Corrodeedoodle
Came for the radio repair stayed for the “boys of summer”
Thanks for shareing
Considering how long Zenith resisted going to PCB, this radio from 1965 they should have followed this approach when they did the Royal 7000 just a few years later. Sometimes the best decision gets missed - for no obvious reason.
Got one just like it!
Almost made it to the end without propaganda. That's pretty good.
You're up bright and early.
I thought the punchline of 'Boys of Summer' being played during the Kung Flu quarry'n'teen is that there really is "nobody on the road, nobody on the beach"...
Deadhead sticker on a Cadillac!😊😊
29:00 An interesting technical solution .. !! If my eyes don't fail, I can see the aluminum cores in the coils ... Not high frequency ferrite or brass ..?! The last time I saw this in the drums of the channel switch of a tube TV .. I see it for the first time in a radio receiver ..)) As a matter of fact, I did not have such a receiver to see this before ..))
Respect !
Hey, the air plains are flying again. :-)
What do you do with all af those repaired radios?
So the RF Amp tested good even though it was really bad? I have never seen that before in almost 50 years of messing with electronics. THAT REALLY DESERVES MORE ATTENTION!
@jdmccorful
4 жыл бұрын
Expect the un expected and you will be a survivor.
@waltschannel7465
4 жыл бұрын
Look at the "diagram" that the tester presents. It looked like a diode, IIRC, even though it showed gain. That's a tester SW fault as far as I'm concerned.
You probably tested that rf transistor with the case lead floating. Bet you had a case wisker short, and if you'd have cut the case lead in the radio it might have worked. The Ruskie's work FB though.
@8:04 - That manual has a typo: 88 - 108 KC; should be 88 - 108 MC
16:52 Can you flash pop the whisker out like I used to do with my NiCads ?
What about sony kv? Found the schematic? Part 2?
Thanx. I really enjoy watching you work trouble on this stuff. Did you get invited to Pelosi's house for ice-cream???
You can rejuvenate germanium Transistors with whiskers in it when you put it at 50-80 degrees celsius in a oven for 40 minutes.
if you use a diode to jump that switch you can manetane the full function of the DC jack
@SarahRWilson
3 жыл бұрын
He'd need a schottky diode, something like a 1N5820. A regular silicon diode will cost about 0.7V from the battery voltage.
@God-CDXX
3 жыл бұрын
@@SarahRWilson 1N5820 is $0.20 that is no prob
Hmm, that's not the first time music that came out while I was in high school or college was on the oldies station.. And my reaction was hey, why is that on the oldies station?!?!?
@jonathaneastwood2927
2 жыл бұрын
Just getting old mate!
Does it not pop crackle masterpony
Also, I've been thinking about making a similar channel about working on strictly tube stuff, would you have any tips for someone starting a new channel??
@shango066
4 жыл бұрын
lots of work, lots of established channels doing tube stuff. what do you want out of it...follow your heart
@jquest43
4 жыл бұрын
@@shango066 can you fix my o3 ozone machine from 15 years ago..mint condition..I live in La and can pay jquest43@gmail.com
Well.....when are you going to build a Interocitor ???? With Bead condenser model #AB-619.
FM (No Static At All)
❤👍👍👍
So , Where can I get one of those transistor testers. Mine failed years ago , and I like the one that you are using. Please advise ? ( By the way -- ALWAYS Great Videos ! Thank you for them. It is making life sitting at home , much better. )
@quantumleap359
4 жыл бұрын
There's a ton of them on Ebay. Cheap, most all of them are the same, mine runs on a 9 volt.
@55benchguy
4 жыл бұрын
@@quantumleap359 Cool , I look. Do you have a brand name or model ?
@waltschannel7465
4 жыл бұрын
@@55benchguy There are no brand names on those tester units. Probably cloned from a single unit.
👍👍✌️😎
You should make an alignment in rf stages
Totally amusing how cold war era American made radios can now be brought back to life with Russian transistors!
Прикольная шкала! СССР спас Америку транзисторами! )))
Where did you get your translated Russian spec sheets?
👍
That looked like one of them robota hawks keeping an eye from the sky on unauthorized free-range humans.
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Am I the only one who thought the lightning noise was cool? 😎 LOL
22:27 Is that solder suppose to be a joke ?
Watching this whole video was great except for the very last part when you were tuning the stations and you hit a commercial that had the phrase DOT COM in it. Man, I just hate that. I'm sick and tired of hearing that phrase every few seconds either over the radio or on the tv.
@QuadMochaMatti
4 жыл бұрын
The late Jimmy Smith, legendary Jazzman and Master of the Mighty B-3 Hammond, cut both an album and a track titled "Dot Com Blues," at about the time of the Dot Com bubble bust. He was ahead of the game when it comes to disillusionment with that nonsense.
@jdmccorful
4 жыл бұрын
Don't forget the shoutout for Gordon Goodwin's band ,I guess KJAZZ.
@jrs0007
3 жыл бұрын
What I hate is "coming up"
Shango is it for sale
My brother had a bust-me-sticker on a Monte Carlo lol
Could be the driver transistor.
"Dead Head" for a long time I didn't know what that meant.
27:34 Mrs. Miller on the radio airwaves?! Well alright....
''Mains power socket will never be used''what if someone else gets the radio ?
So many times, seems like it’s mechanical component failures.