wow such an old wireless radio set this time, cant wait to watch this again quietly all the way through.. Clever man indeed. such fabulous restorations always .
You have a great channel and a great philosophy - watching your videos taught me to relax and approach vintage radio repair without the genuflecting or handwringing so often found among collectors.
My mother was a phone operator. I learned to solder from her. Even learned some zingers when she grabbed the business end of an iron. She went on to work for RCA . I worked for the army as a 31m20/31m20-2t. Carrier attendant/ radio operator, and Sylvania tv. Thanks to the start my mom got me.
And here we see an actual "Breadboard Radio" in the beginning days of radio and today we work with surface mount in the 04 size ( 0.040 x 0.020 inches) under a microscope. What a journey! You really show us how electronics evolved. Thank You for the adventure. Bravo.
So many interesting and educational videos over the past few weeks. I am learning bit by bit so I can tackle the restoration of an old tube radio I got off eBay. Many thanks.
His videos are fantastic. I don’t know whats more entertaining, learning from him or being surprised by what ensemble he wears next! Love the videos. Highly informative!
Thank you for uploading this as I enjoy videos showing restoration and repairing old radios and electronics items instead of just running them into the dumpster.... This set is from about 1923. UV201 tubes are very, very early. Uv201A tubes are a couple years newer and require less current due to the thorium filament.
You are amazing... I have always loved your videos; all of them have been so instructive, and you show your passion for antique electronics and how you care for them. Keep up the fantastic work!
Thanks for these videos Ron, in the 50s my dad was a radio repairer and I as a kid I was totally bewildered looking at the jungle underneath the chassis on the radios, same as my dad very skilful and new the ins and outs of it all, thank you.
Wow, that 1’17”.00 felt like about 5” . Thanks for a great vid again Ron. I’m into tube music amps, and these vids help tremendously with an understanding of what goes on, as well as the dangers. Cheers.
Excellent job.. what a Beautiful Radio.. I do a lot of restoring of old furniture.. I use Citristrip Stripping Gel.. it works Excellent, and the best part is you can get it on your hands, and it wont take your skin off lol.lol.lol.. give it a try I think you will like the results as much as I do.. thank you for your videos I really enjoy watching them..
I REALLY enjoyed this one, since I have a collection of 20's sets. You make a complicated project look so damn easy! And I know it's anything but! Only two sh*ts....and one "F" bomb. Must have tried your patience! A beautiful result! Thanks for uploading. Please keep 'em coming!
I came here just to say I am so excited to watch all of your new videos! I don't have time right now, but I've been subscribed for a few years and you popped up in my recommended videos today. I am so happy to see all of the new content, there was a good period of inactivity on your channel and I was a little worried we wouldn't see more of you!
I know Im asking randomly but does anyone know a trick to get back into an instagram account..? I was stupid lost the password. I love any tips you can offer me.
@Juan Travis Thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site thru google and I'm waiting for the hacking stuff now. Seems to take quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
Wow,I have never seen anything like that before in my 48yrs .How fantastic. Thank you Ron for another great video am excited to see what you find next.
Another great video years ago in the sixties my dad on the flea market on the Boulevard in New Haven Connecticut he collected the rents from the vendors at the end of the day whatever they didn't sell that would throw on the file back in the sixties there was a beautiful Atwater Kent radio with the horn I wanted to take it home my father wouldn't let me I'm still mad at them to this day and he's been going 28 years always love your videos
You´r so gifted, Ron...What a talent..! I really enjoy all of your vids here. And, those who only are focusing on your clothes- shame on them...My deepest respect for your skills...In my youth I knew a old man, who also restored these old radios, like you. He just did id- out of his head... I had a large collection og radios from the 30´- 40´s. He often repaired them for me...and had a great fun of it...
I was trying to figure out how to start tackling restoration of my AK 10 and your video gave me the confidence to give it a try. Thanks for a very well produced tutorial.
Good one, Ron. There's a model 12 Atwater Kent breadboard on ebay right now . It's sitting at $770.00 with a day left on the auction. Four Hundred seems like a steal for your set. Thanks for keeping these museum pieces alive!
I was sharing your enthusiasm upon the main transfo dissasembly, the opening moment was unbelievable. Anyway awesome work as usual my dear, happy you got a nice working piece of history to add to your collection.
Beautiful restoration! Thanks for all the time and effort put into documenting the process. I have a 10C that I've been wanting to restore but have not had the courage to jump into. This should give me the step by step help needed to tackle it.
Very nice work from you. I can learn so much from you. In the story you write that it is hot. Here in the Netherlands it can also get very hot in the summer. I just don't have air conditioning.
Another excellent video. Restored mine last year and it sits in the dining room along with the Grundig 3500. A real eye catcher and a bit of a Star Trek connection! Cheers, Geoff
Well, that was very interesting! I have never seen a radio like that before and was very interested in watching you refurbish it.. Thanks for the share... and carry on!
Well, did you try to clean the wooden board with soapy water first? I honestly did mostly scroll through the video, but when is saw the steel woll and the paint stripper, i felt really bad for the poor thing. The finish looked like it had just to be cleaned with something that disolves the fatty remanents. I use hand disinfection solution (about 10$ per liter) to clean my radios from 70 years old kitchen dust and nicotine/ tar and the stuff works exeptionally well. Without damaging the lacquer at all.
My parents told of many Store front radio stations. Then the govt put radio under control of the Navy. Then later to our current F CC. What I see is two stages of rf amp, then detctor and a af amp. It's been a while. Used to sweep old man Baker's hard ware store. Late in the evening he had a similar rig. And a log book. See how far we would get. He had a book of radio stations. A certain amount of tweaking and radio time traded for labour. Was fair. His wife always had cookies. And in the cold winter. Had Coco. That's the life my frend.
I normally can't watch a video for more than five minutes. Here it is almost 2 AM and I watched the whole thing. I'll bet there are only a handful of people in the world with your combination of electronics and woodworking / machining / glassmaking skills.
Wonderful work! I'm so jealous of your ability. Like I've said true modern day renaissance man our should I say renaissance person, total respect to you.
Realy nice job on that old radio! Breadbord radio have never heard this before but nice Construction. Keep on with you good videos and have a nice time! Regards from Sweden.
Your Shows Are Very Informative And Entertaining. It's Always A Joy To Watch Your Videos. You Have MAD SKILLS My Friend. Keep Safe And Please Keep The Videos Coming. T.J. The Barefoot Blacksmith.
At least that stuff is big enough to work on. New stuff is made with very small surface mount Rs and Cs and SOT integrated circuits, not to mention very small connectors.
Dear God. That breadboard... look at it again. At the bottom. It's a PCB! A wooden printed circuit board. Look at the traces. It kinda just jumped out at me. And shocked me. Thank you for showing us!
Loving the new camera setup! It's nice to see everything in crystal clear 16:9 format. These early radios are fascinating, yet intimidating to me. Not so much working on them; I think if I had access a schematic, I could fix anything. I'm always worried about setting a knob wrong and screwing everything up.
great work, love the enthusiasm, learning a lot from your channel. havn't ever worked on tube electronics, but really looking forward to it. Suggestion: the original transformer could have been saved I would have melted the tar out to retrieve the core of the transformer, then rewound the core to keep it original, then potted it with black hot glue(for easy removal next time).
hi it's very hard to have AV gear like it was new i pick up a akai mg14d the transformer was burned out some one plugged it in to 240v uk mains i had to pull the transformer apart and move over the good coils to a new transformer if the unit is rare it's good to spend the time like you have here
WOW and MORE WOW an AK model 10 !!!! Question is ; What kind of wood was used in the bread board itself !! I am curious to know!! Great video as always !! I enjoy watching your videos on radio repair and or restore projects !! John Bellas KC2UVN 73's
4 prong bulbs. Hand wound coils. The can is a af amp. Hunt up some Baldwin's. Brasso I used on my medals in the army, Good stuff. Normal wire with some spagetty a 1930-70s. Wire insulation. To make look authentic. Lots o work but worthy of your attention. Tell me might the b+ voltage 45volts? Mind the heater voltage controled by rheostat . A BATTERYS? Good luck de kv4li. Ps looking "a" battery were common to hand crank phones of the time.
I don't know if it will help, mother's mag and aluminum had a interesting effect on copper and brass, giving it a high polish and removing tarnish, it also doesn't leave a wax film and I've had contacts with very very low resistance after just a few moments of cleaning with it. It's not labeled for copper, but it works well. Also thank you Gladsslinger your doing important work and I appreciate learning from you.
I have a shell polisher (a vibrating bowl with polishing media in it) that would do a good job on those blackened brass terminals. I got it for polishing the parts of pinball machines.
Curious what effect the paint has on the Q of the coils, I've been using my home made polystyrene Q-Dope (have a vid of me feeding packing peanuts to a can of MEK) I'll sometimes color it with a touch of paint but haven't used oil based paint.
Been watching your videos and just found out you live in Houston. I really like your work your experience is awesome. I live in Livingston about 100 miles north of you. Once again awesome work I've learned a lot . I've watched about five videos and can't wait for the next one. Cannot believe we are so close.....:) ! Jerold
Do you have a video showing how you made the 3 or 4 different voltage meter you are using in this video to power the atwater kent radio for testing? Our would you please make a video showing how you made it :) The is one nice unit :) at the 1:11 mark in the video you see it.
I have a 1930 L2 chassis in a model 70 Atwater Kent. Your radio is from 1923, I think. The difference in those 7 years is amazing. The L2 chassis, I am told, was the last TRF radio Atwater Kent made. All radios after that were superheterodyne.
One could use standard bathroom liquid scourer to clean the bakerlite of as well, or if you are patient enough rub it down with brasso or auto finishing compound (the peach colored stuff)
I used to use a lighter for all my shrink tubing, till I found the Dremel Versa Tip 2000. It has a hot air tip with a deflector for heat gun use. Also soldering, hot cutting knife and a shaping knife. I have found it to be very useful.
Huh, butane / cordless, looks nice. I use a mains-powered temp-controlled hot air pencil (notionally for SMT devices, but usually instead gets employed for heatshrink and hot glue :-) , but the only-3-feet cord between the base and the pencil is often a bit annoying, kinda yanks my chain :-)
wow such an old wireless radio set this time, cant wait to watch this again quietly all the way through.. Clever man indeed. such fabulous restorations always .
You have a great channel and a great philosophy - watching your videos taught me to relax and approach vintage radio repair without the genuflecting or handwringing so often found among collectors.
My mother was a phone operator. I learned to solder from her. Even learned some zingers when she grabbed the business end of an iron. She went on to work for RCA . I worked for the army as a 31m20/31m20-2t. Carrier attendant/ radio operator, and Sylvania tv. Thanks to the start my mom got me.
My late father was an apprentice for RCA in the 1950's
My mum taught me to solder too, she worked in an electronics factory.
And here we see an actual "Breadboard Radio" in the beginning days of radio and today we work with surface mount in the 04 size ( 0.040 x 0.020 inches) under a microscope. What a journey! You really show us how electronics evolved. Thank You for the adventure. Bravo.
So many interesting and educational videos over the past few weeks. I am learning bit by bit so I can tackle the restoration of an old tube radio I got off eBay. Many thanks.
His videos are fantastic. I don’t know whats more entertaining, learning from him or being surprised by what ensemble he wears next! Love the videos. Highly informative!
His videos or her videos?😁
That is the coolest radio I've ever seen. Great job bringing it back to its former glory.
Thank you for uploading this as I enjoy videos showing restoration and repairing old radios and electronics items instead of just running them into the dumpster.... This set is from about 1923. UV201 tubes are very, very early. Uv201A tubes are a couple years newer and require less current due to the thorium filament.
You are amazing... I have always loved your videos; all of them have been so instructive, and you show your passion for antique electronics and how you care for them. Keep up the fantastic work!
Thanks for these videos Ron, in the 50s my dad was a radio repairer and I as a kid I was totally bewildered looking at the jungle underneath the chassis on the radios, same as my dad very skilful and new the ins and outs of it all, thank you.
Wow, that 1’17”.00 felt like about 5” . Thanks for a great vid again Ron. I’m into tube music amps, and these vids help tremendously with an understanding of what goes on, as well as the dangers. Cheers.
Excellent job.. what a Beautiful Radio.. I do a lot of restoring of old furniture.. I use Citristrip Stripping Gel.. it works Excellent, and the best part is you can get it on your hands, and it wont take your skin off lol.lol.lol.. give it a try I think you will like the results as much as I do.. thank you for your videos I really enjoy watching them..
Thank you. You did a wonderful job restoring that classic old Atwater Kent. I liked that you explained everything as you went along.
Another GREAT video Ron.. !! You bring old items rarely seen to us.. Well done!
I REALLY enjoyed this one, since I have a collection of 20's sets. You make a complicated project look so damn easy! And I know it's anything but! Only two sh*ts....and one "F" bomb. Must have tried your patience! A beautiful result! Thanks for uploading. Please keep 'em coming!
I came here just to say I am so excited to watch all of your new videos! I don't have time right now, but I've been subscribed for a few years and you popped up in my recommended videos today. I am so happy to see all of the new content, there was a good period of inactivity on your channel and I was a little worried we wouldn't see more of you!
I know Im asking randomly but does anyone know a trick to get back into an instagram account..?
I was stupid lost the password. I love any tips you can offer me.
@Gianni Donovan Instablaster :)
@Juan Travis Thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site thru google and I'm waiting for the hacking stuff now.
Seems to take quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Juan Travis It worked and I finally got access to my account again. I'm so happy!
Thank you so much, you saved my ass!
@Gianni Donovan no problem :)
You are the master of restorations, thank you for all videos, please keep them coming
Wow,I have never seen anything like that before in my 48yrs .How fantastic. Thank you Ron for another great video am excited to see what you find next.
Another great video years ago in the sixties my dad on the flea market on the Boulevard in New Haven Connecticut he collected the rents from the vendors at the end of the day whatever they didn't sell that would throw on the file back in the sixties there was a beautiful Atwater Kent radio with the horn I wanted to take it home my father wouldn't let me I'm still mad at them to this day and he's been going 28 years always love your videos
Great job Ron. Much better in 16:9 and much better focus. Love your videos.
You´r so gifted, Ron...What a talent..! I really enjoy all of your vids here. And, those who only are focusing on your clothes- shame on them...My deepest respect for your skills...In my youth I knew a old man, who also restored these old radios, like you. He just did id- out of his head... I had a large collection og radios from the 30´- 40´s. He often repaired them for me...and had a great fun of it...
@H Higgins Agree. Ron´s skills and knowledge is amazing...
Wow. 5 restorations in 3 weeks. You are spoiling us.
I am everytime amazed how you get these old radios to work again. keep it up, I love it.
I'm amazed too! I have some spectacular fails in my efforts! But I don't make videos of them!
@@glasslinger hihiI dont blame you.
I was trying to figure out how to start tackling restoration of my AK 10 and your video gave me the confidence to give it a try. Thanks for a very well produced tutorial.
Good one, Ron. There's a model 12 Atwater Kent breadboard on ebay right now . It's sitting at $770.00 with a day left on the auction. Four Hundred seems like a steal for your set. Thanks for keeping these museum pieces alive!
I was sharing your enthusiasm upon the main transfo dissasembly, the opening moment was unbelievable.
Anyway awesome work as usual my dear, happy you got a nice working piece of history to add to your collection.
Beautiful restoration! Thanks for all the time and effort put into documenting the process. I have a 10C that I've been wanting to restore but have not had the courage to jump into. This should give me the step by step help needed to tackle it.
Ron I. believe out of all of the radios I have watched you fix this one is my favorite. I think this is my fourth time watching lol.
Maybe the most beautiful radio ever seen... a piece of art!!!!
Magic before my eyes. Thank-You for the upload.
Awesome video! Love the radio and the repair. All your videos are great!!
Hooray, you are back! Thank you, so much. Fun .
I'm jealous of you from all of these great finds you keep finding.
Hi Ron, pretty good restoration, i like your great work. Best greetings from germany.
Really enjoyed the restoration, subscribed after the first video. I would love to get my hands on an old museum piece like that.
Very nice work from you. I can learn so much from you. In the story you write that it is hot. Here in the Netherlands it can also get very hot in the summer. I just don't have air conditioning.
Thanks for sharing another great video with us, and passing on your wealth of knowledge.
This video was excellent , i restore early crystal sets and now if I find a model 10 I won't be frightened of it. Thanks so much.
I can't tell you the enjoyment I get out of your videos. I wish I had your skills.
Another excellent video. Restored mine last year and it sits in the dining room along with the Grundig 3500. A real eye catcher and a bit of a Star Trek connection!
Cheers, Geoff
Very nice Ron. You produce great videos. 👍
Well, that was very interesting! I have never seen a radio like that before and was very interested in watching you refurbish it.. Thanks for the share... and carry on!
Piece of art, these things. Even beautiful to look at. Wish I could find one if these . Great work 👍🏻
Well, did you try to clean the wooden board with soapy water first? I honestly did mostly scroll through the video, but when is saw the steel woll and the paint stripper, i felt really bad for the poor thing.
The finish looked like it had just to be cleaned with something that disolves the fatty remanents.
I use hand disinfection solution (about 10$ per liter) to clean my radios from 70 years old kitchen dust and nicotine/ tar and the stuff works exeptionally well. Without damaging the lacquer at all.
Ooohhhh, just like the one I acquired last fall ! This will be good !
I haven't watched all the video yet, but I would like to say nice clear video there Ron.
My parents told of many Store front radio stations. Then the govt put radio under control of the Navy. Then later to our current F CC. What I see is two stages of rf amp, then detctor and a af amp. It's been a while. Used to sweep old man Baker's hard ware store. Late in the evening he had a similar rig. And a log book. See how far we would get. He had a book of radio stations. A certain amount of tweaking and radio time traded for labour. Was fair. His wife always had cookies. And in the cold winter. Had Coco. That's the life my frend.
I normally can't watch a video for more than five minutes. Here it is almost 2 AM and I watched the whole thing. I'll bet there are only a handful of people in the world with your combination of electronics and woodworking / machining / glassmaking skills.
True, I know one of them, a dying breed
Really nice radio! You are very skilled. You make a big project look simple. Keep posting more videos please!
Wonderful work! I'm so jealous of your ability. Like I've said true modern day renaissance man our should I say renaissance person, total respect to you.
Realy nice job on that old radio! Breadbord radio have never heard this before but nice Construction. Keep on with you good videos and have a nice time!
Regards from Sweden.
Your Shows Are Very Informative And Entertaining. It's Always A Joy To Watch Your Videos. You Have MAD SKILLS My Friend. Keep Safe And Please Keep The Videos Coming. T.J. The Barefoot Blacksmith.
Another fantastic video .Great work.
You're absolutely right picking the green color it looks excellent
At least that stuff is big enough to work on. New stuff is made with very small surface mount Rs and Cs and SOT integrated circuits, not to mention very small connectors.
Great work again Professor Ron......
I Wish I Had An Instructor Like You When I Was An Apprentice. You Have Mad Skills. Best Wishes.
Nice work ron, a beautiful old radio, I'm quite jealous!.
gyad! you find the oldest and rarest radios of anybody *ever* ! incredible
Really fascinating. Yes, the green accent paint looks very good.
Dear God. That breadboard... look at it again. At the bottom. It's a PCB! A wooden printed circuit board. Look at the traces. It kinda just jumped out at me. And shocked me. Thank you for showing us!
Same here i was wondering how pcbs got started and here is my answer.
wow what an awesome looking set, love the look of all the valves.
Loving the new camera setup! It's nice to see everything in crystal clear 16:9 format.
These early radios are fascinating, yet intimidating to me. Not so much working on them; I think if I had access a schematic, I could fix anything. I'm always worried about setting a knob wrong and screwing everything up.
เก่งมากป้า ระวังควันตะกั่วด้วย รักษาสุขภาพด้วย
great work, love the enthusiasm, learning a lot from your channel. havn't ever worked on tube electronics, but really looking forward to it. Suggestion: the original transformer could have been saved I would have melted the tar out to retrieve the core of the transformer, then rewound the core to keep it original, then potted it with black hot glue(for easy removal next time).
I understand but don't do it. The task is a LOT more difficult and time consuming than it seems. Been there done that!
Fantastic work, as usual - and that kitten, such a beauty!
hi it's very hard to have AV gear like it was new i pick up a akai mg14d the transformer was burned out some one plugged it in to 240v uk mains
i had to pull the transformer apart and move over the good coils to a new transformer if the unit is rare it's good to spend the time like you have here
Great restoration. Have I missed in this long video, if you have shown the circuit diagram of this very antique radio ?
That's a very interesting radio, never seen one like that before. Thanks for educating us all!
The magic starts with glasslinger's new video. Thank you.
Please, never stop sharig your job. You are unique.
I have one I need to restore and this is going to help me a lot Thanks.....
Thanks, I wish we could listen to this fascinating set for a bit longer
Thanks Ron, great video as always!
Really incredible restoration...…..outstanding work! Walt in Miami
WOW and MORE WOW an AK model 10 !!!! Question is ; What kind of wood was used in the bread board itself !! I am curious to know!! Great video as always !! I enjoy watching your videos on radio repair and or restore projects !! John Bellas KC2UVN 73's
4 prong bulbs. Hand wound coils. The can is a af amp. Hunt up some Baldwin's. Brasso I used on my medals in the army, Good stuff. Normal wire with some spagetty a 1930-70s. Wire insulation. To make look authentic. Lots o work but worthy of your attention. Tell me might the b+ voltage 45volts? Mind the heater voltage controled by rheostat . A BATTERYS? Good luck de kv4li. Ps looking "a" battery were common to hand crank phones of the time.
Hmmm. I see there was a Model 10 Radiodyne, Model 10A, B and C. Which one is this?
Simply amazing! Please keep the videos coming, Ron.
Beautiful work on a beautiful radio. Well done.
Amazing job; thanks a lot for showing us!
I don't know if it will help, mother's mag and aluminum had a interesting effect on copper and brass, giving it a high polish and removing tarnish, it also doesn't leave a wax film and I've had contacts with very very low resistance after just a few moments of cleaning with it. It's not labeled for copper, but it works well.
Also thank you Gladsslinger your doing important work and I appreciate learning from you.
Great Job, you going to do any TV sets again, I enjoy those projects.
Very enjoyable all your videos are thanks for posting.
Haii..I am a big fan of yours..I watch your all videos..Love from Kerala, India🇮🇳
I have a shell polisher (a vibrating bowl with polishing media in it) that would do a good job on those blackened brass terminals. I got it for polishing the parts of pinball machines.
Which one do you have?
Curious what effect the paint has on the Q of the coils, I've been using my home made polystyrene Q-Dope (have a vid of me feeding packing peanuts to a can of MEK) I'll sometimes color it with a touch of paint but haven't used oil based paint.
Magnificent. I love how you tube roll real time. Awesome!
Been watching your videos and just found out you live in Houston. I really like your work your experience is awesome. I live in Livingston about 100 miles north of you. Once again awesome work I've learned a lot . I've watched about five videos and can't wait for the next one. Cannot believe we are so close.....:) ! Jerold
Do you have a video showing how you made the 3 or 4 different voltage meter you are using in this video to power the atwater kent radio for testing? Our would you please make a video showing how you made it :) The is one nice unit :) at the 1:11 mark in the video you see it.
Great Job! Thank you for sharing...
Very, very nice job!!
Love to have a video tour of your collection
Coming up soon!
Just turned on my lap top glasslinger ! Great !
Perfect restoration. I learned so much.
I have a 1930 L2 chassis in a model 70 Atwater Kent. Your radio is from 1923, I think. The difference in those 7 years is amazing. The L2 chassis, I am told, was the last TRF radio Atwater Kent made. All radios after that were superheterodyne.
So cool, wish my old fella was still alive he’d love to see it working.
One could use standard bathroom liquid scourer to clean the bakerlite of as well, or if you are patient enough rub it down with brasso or auto finishing compound (the peach colored stuff)
I used to use a lighter for all my shrink tubing, till I found the Dremel Versa Tip 2000. It has a hot air tip with a deflector for heat gun use. Also soldering, hot cutting knife and a shaping knife. I have found it to be very useful.
Huh, butane / cordless, looks nice. I use a mains-powered temp-controlled hot air pencil (notionally for SMT devices, but usually instead gets employed for heatshrink and hot glue :-) , but the only-3-feet cord between the base and the pencil is often a bit annoying, kinda yanks my chain :-)
I can see a part two to this video where those bad tubes are taken apart and re-made to be as good as new..