@Blondie SL The little green is probably the green crt gun burnt out not the camera. This is probably a high hour set and it's very old so it's not strange that CRT is tired. The video was shot in 2008 I doubt It was done by a vcr camera, but then again the video was made by the hipster who has a room full of these very old tvs, so you might be right there is a slight chance it wasn't filmed with a digital camera at all.
Wow. So cool. Most people alive now don't remember how revolutionary color TV was. Of course most people alive now do not remember when there was no TV. My dad bought a color TV because "Bonanza" was in color. It cost a LOT of money in 1965. I was thrilled because I could watch "Lost in Space" in color.
I love Lost in Space! They're re-running it here in the UK at the moment, and in fact, tonight's episode was the first colour one, the one with the earthquakes, where they finally blasted off the Jupiter 2...
@@danieldaniels7571 Amazingly, the price of an average color TV back then is about the same as an average HDTV today. However, if you spent $500 for a good 21-inch console color TV in the early 1970s it would be the equivalent of $3,300 in today's money.
Around '66, a nice, older couple on our block had a super-rare color console TV. They let a 9 year-old, yours truly, watch a retina-melting episode of the hot new "Batman" show; I swear, it was combo of Eden, and an acid trip. I'll never forget it.
Extraordinary performance for the era. Too bad not a lot of color was being broadcast in 1956 but the owner would have been the envy of the neighborhood when a color program was available. Obviously WAY ahead of it's time! This was cutting edge back then.
When RCA got the final FCC approval for their system, the equipment was capable of producing an excellent picture. However, consumers didn't see that for another 10 years. The TK-41 color cameras produced great picture as did the sets, but only if you watched it on a closed circuit. They had not yet figured out how to transmit a stable color signal that was shielded from outside interface that required viewers to adjust the color every few minutes. Several innovations were developed that overcame these problems and allowed the public to see just how good color TV really was. By 1964, sales of color sets started to take off. The researchers and technicians at RCA did an incredible job. In fact, the NTSC system that was originally derided all over the world because of it's initial instabilities, wasn't really tossed aside when we switched to digital HDTV. It's still the basis for producing a color image. ......
@@atariforever2002 Well content is a very subjective thing anyway but most of the shows but not all of them are pretty crappy there are a few good ones.
This surviving set deserves better programming, Peter Gunn,for example. (sure It's slightly newer than this set and B/W but a faithful to the era test of the "color kller" and would not offend the 'ol girl!)
anyone else remember that wonderful aroma of a hot wooden TV cabinet. If you left the TV on long enough there would be this sweet aroma of warm wood and hot electronics
Ah, the magic of old tube TVs. I also remember the sound coming on before the picture, and the little white dot in the center of the screen when you turned the set off.
Absolutely! When I was a kid, At night I was always sticking my head around back to see the MAGIC AND A LITTLE SCARY GLOW of the tubes.and awesome smell of hot electronics!! I still get my fix from a 1954 Zenith am fm phonograph console that works perfectly.has the cobramatic turn table too. My great uncle left it to me when he passed in 1994, at 100!! He knew how much I liked it . He bought it new..it has lots of glowing tubes and the familiar odor that goes with it. I also have several Zenith table top radios, one from 1961, the other 1964. Both tube types, and playing well. Also have a 1941 Zenith floor model radio that belonged to my mother's parent's. She told me on December 7, 1941 when pearl harbor was bombed, everyone listened to everything happening on THAT RADIO! Still works!!
Wow, it actually blows me away how good the picture looks on this set! I'd wager that there are very few sets like this around today that still work this flawlessly. I hope this set is still in good shape after 14 years.
worked for an rca dealer in the 60's. bought a used ctc15 console and remember changing the sulphide crt for a newer rebuilt rare earth model. thrilled my new mrs. first program we watched together was "family affair" with the intro kaleidoscope pattern. those were the days for a young married tech. barry.
Fantastic. Its a credit to you for doing the restoration work. The picture & sound are excellent. The CRT was obviously built to last. A piece of History to admire!
In reality, the round 21" tubes lasted between 5 and 10 years when used daily. I changed a hundred of them easy. Of course, there are many for whatever reason just defied physics it seems and ran much longer. My dad's CTC11 needed it's original sulfide phosphor tube changed around 1969 (ten years) and the replacement tube (hi lite phosphor) went to 1977 before we scrapped the TV for an XL-100.
As a kid I remember all the TV repairmen made house calls to work on the floor model TVs, which everyone seemed to have. He would carry in 2 huge tool chests full of every kind of tube to fit the different TVs. One by one the repairman would take out each tube and test it, then put it back in the TV until he found the one that had burned out.
In my early days I was servicing CTC15 and later models. I am in my mid 70s now. I serviced so many of them. This goes back a bit over 50 years ago for me. Back in the days of these TV sets the RCA was among the best of the available TV sets.
Let me add a little history...My Dad was an RCA dealer and we had the very first color TV in town, he also sold the first color tv in town and I grew up in the business and running the business till 1985. The very first color TVs used a vertical chassis and the top of the cabinet was hinged, it would raise up for servicing, they had a boat load of tubes and your TV tech was your best friend! At first there was only one hour of color TV broadcast per week, RCA owned NBC and talked Disney into being the first program, Disney's Wonderful World of Color was the name as I recall. Color broadcasting slowly increased over the years, but exploded when RCA finally licensed other manufacturers to make their own color TVs, I'm not sure about the year but it would have been about 1966 I believe. When I started selling color TVs RCA was the only one, but about the time I was in college they licensed it, every color TV of the time had a notice: Built under license from RCA Victor. One other small detail, growing up around a TV repair shop, the owner's name written on the chassis means that at some time the chassis was removed from the cabinet and taken to the shop for service, we used paper tags but some techs just wrote the customer's name right on the chassis.
This made me feel young and I’m old !!! Lol, I was born in 1989 and by the time I was 3 years old I was using a remote control and a random Sony Vega in the early 90’s, never met an 80’s wooden tv, without remote, all I knew was black plastic tv’s of the 90’s, vhs, handycam, windows 3.1, etc etc since I was a baby, my generation is truly not young anymore and we have never seen an original record player, we had to re-invent them to see them working as a retro trend !! Like it’s a piece of art from a museum
I graduated high school in 1989 so I'm a bit older than you. I was lucky in the sense that growing up in the late 70s/early 80s, I basically had the same electronic experience my parents did. Console TVs, eight track players, tons of radios from big to handheld. The first new tech experience for the whole family was in 1977 when we bought the first Sears Telegames unit (a.k.a. Atari 2600). Having said that, I also was young enough to enjoy "new" tech like affordable VCRs, home computers (got my first Apple IIc in 1985), and of course the internet. So in a way I had the best of BOTH worlds, unlike the kids today who never operated a reel-to-reel player, or an 8-track player.
We had that exact TV in 1959, and were the first in our entire neighborhood to have color TV. The only differences I can see is that ours would swivel left & right, and our front control panel's door had a spring to flip it closed. On top was my dad's Heathkit FM radio, that he wired to the TV's speaker. I bought my parents their first microwave in 1978, and my mom wouldn't let it in the house. In 1980 I gave my dad a video camera and VCR. I'm glad I did. I have home moves since then, starting when I was 25. I'm 65 now, and have few friends with home vids that are that old. Thanks for sharing this video!
What happened to that colour TV? Did you get rid of it? (And if you did, when and where?) Does it still work? (If it doesn’t, when did it and will you fix it?) Lastly, why did you get it in the first place?
@@empireOfcHiNa8888 - My parents disposed of it when multiple "tubes" began failing. We then got a Magnavox with "the works in a drawer" so you could pull-out circuit panels and replace them easily. I got my first color TV in 1978, RCA, and it was still working when I disposed of it in 2020; although, I couldn't watch broadcast TV anymore because of HD. We used it solely to play my Atari 2600 games. My dad got our first color TV so we could watch "The Wizard of Oz" and Macy's Thanksgiving parades in color.
It's amazing to think 65 years ago someone brought that TV home, bran new, from the store. The kids were probably on the floor watching it for hours, the next day their friends came over and were amazed. So many stories that tv could tell over 65 years....
Modern TV's will, but the idiotic superficial society won't let them. Fucking millenials gotta get a new TV every 5 months because their old one is not cool anymore.
Its easy to do that nowadays. Electronics this day and age are much cheaper in comparison to electronics from many years ago. I bet that TV originally sold for a families months wages back then!
cowtippingrocks I was watching some 50's sitcom,I think it was Bachelor Father, in one episode I think he said he was saving up for a year to buy a TV. He had a little jar he kept putting small amounts of money into.
Nowadays we would whip out the plastic regardless of if we had the money... and would probably never had it paid off by the time it broke down and had to buy another one.
Motorola offered the first rectangular 25" color TV sets in 1964. Picture tubes were made by National Video; I had the great honor of removing 2 safety screws from the back of a brand-new set and the back broke the tube neck at the socket. Had to go and exchange tube and re-install it. In those days we had to go thru the process of convergence which was quite elaborate and it could take 30 minutes or more. We used a pattern selector to accomplish this.
And the good old days of listening to vinyl records that popped and skipped and you had to turn them over to hear the other side. I remember one vinyl record I bought that when I opened it, there was no music on the disk. It was just a blank vinyl disc with no grooves, not even a hole for the spindle. I took it back to the store and they couldn’t believe it either. 🙄🤭 They did exchange it for another copy of the record . They opened it in the store to make sure it was a good record.
I had a brother who was mentally retarded. He had a habit of filling his mouth with water and spitting it on stuff. One time he spit a mouth full of water into the back of our TV set. Was not pretty what happened next! 🤭😱
Imagine the history of the shows that families watched on this tv. If dad was like most of us dads he probably watched a lot of sports on it. Cool bit of history. Thanks for sharing with us.
One thing I find impressive, apart from the fact that the TV is functioning perfectly, is that the camera didn’t do that shutter speed illusion where there’s a rolling line on the CRT screen
@@SoundJudgment no, because then there would be a rolling line on the CRT and there is not. So the camera and CRT are probably at the same or a very similar frame rate. The camera is probably recording in NTSC or something, since the video is also 480 rows.
Love it. It's great to see people who have this passion for keeping old tech going. I like doing this with computers when I can, and I love old 30s, 40s and 50s radios and 60s HiFi equipment. But TVs, wow!
I had a CTC-15 Color set. I believe it was from about 1964 if I remember correctly. Back in 64 the set cost about $900. Back then this was very expensive! When everything was working properly and reception was good the pictures and sound was very good. RCA was one of the better TV sets during these times.
Nice old set. I remember fixing one of those when I started my TV repair career in 1982. I used to have a Philips K6, but a worker broke the picture tube working at my place so it went in the bin.
1957 Incredible!! At this time here in Spain we have only a few black and white TV receivers mostly kits for assembling in a radio repair services and the color TV appear at middle of 70's with brands like a Philips,Telefunken,Saba and others. Congratulations your TV looks nice and have a incredible good image and sound without semiconductors, only tubes. This TVs are made for during a lot of years and today is impossible made something like this. I also repair old radios and TVs but this is it a little jewel from the great USA. Thanks and Like.
Wow beautiful color on that classic set. Great job! The cabinet is still nice too. Of course now in 2021 there are no more color analog signals being broadcast, so those wonderful old circuits are officially retired. But it’s the engineering of something so solid that it could function 100% 65 years later with little maintenance that truly impresses. Our grandfathers really knew what they were doing.
I'm 23 years old but I grown up with a TV set from the 70s that was like a piece of furniture. I think it was made by RCA. I remember that I constantly needed to adjust the color and had many good times playing my sega genesis on it.
NBC, owned by RCA, did most of the early color broadcasting to help promote sales of receivers. CBS, who lost a patent battle with RCA over its mechanical color TV process (a real "Rube Goldberg" system that, unlike RCA's color, could not be received as a B/W picture) actively fought against color; while cash-poor ABC simply couldn't afford color equipment. Some individual local stations did adopt color for local programs. Thanks for sharing this wonderful old TV set!
I didn't know the USA had colour TV in the 1950's. Here in Australia we got colour TV in 1975 using the PAL standed and we don't have a tint control on the CRT TV's.
Sean are you sure? I'm from New Zealand and we got colour tv in 1973 (in time for the commonwealth games that was held here). I'm sure Australia was earlier like the late 60s. However though the broadcasts were in colour, I think my family brought their first colour set in the early to mid 80s due to the cost.
Yes, although it wasn't very common in the U.S. until the late 1960s/70s. My dad, who was born in 1958, said his family didn't own a color TV until 1972.
That's a beauty! I'm a ex-TV man now in commercial audio, but when I started in the business, I worked for a used tv shop that sold CTC 5's for $75-100 each (1970 dollars). The sets they sold were mostly trade-in's from a large RCA dealer.
Wow, astonishing work! From this video it looks like you've done an amazing job on convergence, geometry, raster sizing and h/v alignment. Really nice set!
Oh my God, I'm loving this! For the age this TV set has, the picture and sound are wonderful. I bet that the current flat screen TVs won't be able to show a picture 60 years from now - they are changing the standards every few years: half HD, Full HD, 4K, 8K, 12K...H.264, H.265...DVB-T, DVB-T2, etc...while many TV channels in the world are still broadcasting in 4:3 aspect ratio.
A very good job done restoring this old set and the colours shown seemed quite stable and natural. What I'd like to know is, back in 1956 would this set have been able to display as good pictures as in your demonstration given that back then the tv cameras and transmission systems were not as good as now? I've heard that in the early days the colour signal on Ntsc was always drifting and true colour would then be lost particularly in poor reception areas and certain weather conditions resulting in noticeably yellowish or green skin tones for example.
As a 10 yr old in 1965, I remember my neighbor across the street had a color tv. At night you could see color reflecting from inside the house. I could only imagine how nice it must be to see color television back then
Beautiful. Colour TV in 1956...the same year that TV transmissions started here in Australia. While you guys were watching colour TV we got a grainy B&W picture of, "Good evening, and welcome to Television." And flash forward to now...we're still behind the times.
Forgotten fact--American analog tv system had a horizontal scan rate of 15,750 Hz. The horizontal sweep transformer in the set consequently vibrated, or "hummed," at this frequency, producing an audio tone that could be heard by children but not adults. As a kid, I could tell by listening if the television was on, even if the sound was turned off.
Hopelessand Forlorn I remember walking into a room or computer lab and hearing a TV or monitor on somewhere. I would search around until I found it and turned it off. My father could not relate.
Hopelessand Forlorn That is so wierd, I remember being able to hear the old tv's when powered on but no picture or sound. It was extremely high pitched.
That was an incredible picture and Sound for the age of the TV. Linearity both vertical and horizontally from what can be seen without a grid pattern was spot on. Did you have to adjust it at all by using the CRT neck adjusters? That could be used today full time, the CRT didn't look tired at all. Good restoration job.
Dirty_Horror A beef a lot of people have with cable is that although you get a lot of channels, many of the SD channels are still analog. Because it's a closed system, they do not have to abide by the mandate.
It's still possible to demostrate working of this type of TV while having RF modulator or using cable analog TV. Anyway I think that analog broadcasting was shut down too early.
Beautiful restoration. It looks new. That has great color for a 57 year old TV. The original family of the TV must have been very extravagant and rich. In 1956 color broadcasting only averaged about ten hours a week in the U.S. The money they paid for that set when it was new would be the same as spending $12,500 today.
Nice restore and awesome convergence job! I always loved 'roundies' because the phosphors they used in the crts had accurate hues, especially red. The rectangular crts had a brighter picture, but the red phosphors were orange-red in hue and they 'fudged' the color demodulators to try and compensate.
Dipende dai sistemi utilizzati di trasmissione NTSC, PAL, SECAM l SECAM G, come colori anche ora con i multistandard il migliore come definizione è il francese SECAM anche nei LED, OLED e 4k
What a beautiful TV! I had a roundie B&W Muntz, but the picture tube was damaged sadly, always wished I could have gotten that TV to work. I ended up giving it away for parts.
As a kid I remember watching Disney's Wonderful World of Color. Sponsored by RCA no doubt to sell color TV's. It worked. I also remember adjusting hue and tint to get right picture. Bonanza was another big deal.
If my memory serves me correctly, I remember gathering in a friends house (in those days the invitation was worded, "wanna come over tonight and watch color TV?") - no mention of any specific program, just whatever was available. But the beautiful images on your restored set are thanks to a lot of technology that has taken place since then. In the early days, they had not yet perfected stage lighting among other things and I remember the live broadcasts where as people walked around the stage they would change from amber to green and we would be constantly trying to adjust the set as the program went on because of the constant fluctuation.
Great job done there. Years ago, in NZ with assistance I put together a VCR97 Oscilliscope tube TV set in green! It took a NZTV technician to finally get it going but eventually after a couple of dry Summers and static electrical discharge episodes I decided the punishment was too much. It went out into the garage. Bravo to you Sir.
Back in the old days people actually talked to each other - when there was nothing on TV to watch. And kids, we played outside all day with no electronic devices. I don't know how we survived? :-)
Alan Spicer We didn't have a TV in our house until 1966. Some of my best childhood memories are those years before the TV came along. I had 3 brothers and 2 sisters and we were never bored. We occupied our time playing cards, reading and just talking. The TV came along and all of the sudden our family is fighting about what to watch.
Alan Spicer my generation (millenial) was the very last to experience analog tv, i remember watching WGBY and WEDH kids shows untill 6 when all the boring adult stuff would come on lol and then i would go outside to play
Just NBC prime time. I got my first HDTV in 2007, and it was similar with very little being broadcast in HD at the time. I’ve had a 4K TV for 3 years and still no 4K broadcasts yet.
I had a 24" dumont color TV in the very early 60s. The houselight dimmed when I turned it on amd the picture tube would crackle when the high voltage was applied. My dad worked for the Dumont network, later became Metromedia
In today's dollars this TV set would be costing in the range of $14,000. Only people who were fairly well off would buy a TV like this. With these TV sets if all the components are in proper spec and in good condition, and including all the alignments are in proper set up, the pictures are excellent.
At least here in the UK it was common to hire televisions - from Granada and Radio Rentals (microwave ovens too). Right up until the late 1970s. My generation has mobile phone charges, older people hired televisions.
You are indeed right, most of us British peasants could not afford tobuy colour tv's back in the early 70's, and so had to rent one as youmentioned. Prices of consumer electronics have come right downsince then, mainly due to cheap imports from China. This has madeit possible for most now to buy them outright.
the first 2 TV sets my family had were given to us by financially better off relatives. The tv's didn't last long as they were old when we got them. The first new TV we bought was a real odd-ball my dad got at a warehouse sale. It was a Sylvania table top model, blonde wood cabinet and had this white plastic frame around the picture tube that lighted up when you turned on the set. That TV was JUNK and died in 4 years. Then we bought an RCA, B&W console on legs. That was a good TV. It lasted at least 10 years
I think the previous owner of this TV appreciated paying a lot of money and looked after it - these days tv sets are so cheap they are almost disposable ....
My dad purchase one of these RCA sets in 1958, I remember watching many colour programs when I was very small, we lived in Havana and I think that only the U.S. and Cuba had colour television back in the 50's. Some time before we left Havana in the early 60's Tele-Color, channel 12 went off the air and didn't come back until 1975 I hear.
Cuba aired the first color show on March 19, 1958. I remember the sets in the stores. They were very expensive compared to black and white receivers. When Castro took power, he destroyed most of Cuba. I am a retired Broadcast Engineer in America. The station I retired from did not have color until 1964, six years after Cuba. You are very lucky for leaving Cuba so early.
Our first color TV had a "Color Pilot". It was a light on the front of the set to let you know when a program was being broadcast in color. I never understood the concept. 😄
We had one in '56. After we watched the Wizard of Oz and a Disney show, my mother made my dad take it back. She thought the electric bill would be too high.
Disney didn't present any color episodes until he began "THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF COLOR" on NBC in 1961. ABC telecast Disney's weekly series in black and white only. You must have seen something else that looked like a "Disney" program. Not too many color programs were telecast when this model was introduced.
@@fromthesidelines I was quite a youngster at the time. And the folks who I could have questioned further about other shows are long gone. I'll just have to say, whatever. Thanks for your reply.
you could afford a colour tv in the 50s? were you guys practical millionaires? colour sets were insanely expensive. it wasnt until the late 70s even my parents could get a colour tv
That's really a big fun to watch an old TVset! Has it occurred to me that watching a modern show on that old TVset looks like to watch a future from the present moment? :)
You have the same problem with transistors. I've got amplifiers here from the 70/80s that have obsoleted or discontinued parts. I imagine tubes are a bit more forgiving when it comes to equivalents.
True, but it took a few years to get the production right. The first generation of transistors were rather expensive, not very reliable, and would not carry the current needed for the line/frame timebase circuits in a telly.
@@BadWolf762 So, why was it not used in mainstream electronics until the late 50's early 60's. Here in the UK everything was valve tube technology, although you Yanks were always a step ahead of us Brits.
Looks like a beautiful restoration. This was the very latest thing in home entertainment back in the day. Very few homes had a color TV in 1956. I wonder what the cost would have been in today's dollars?
Enjoyed the flash back video! Back when I was in high school I was given a non working CT100 RCA. I cant remember how many $$$$$$ I spent (from lawn mowing money) trying to fix it, as I wanted to experience watching color tv. At that time color programing was very limited, even in the SF bay area. Anyway, your video brought back memories. I eventually got it running, but it didn't look as good as yours. Shortly afterwards the red gun went south.
It's always weird to me to see modern music or TV shows on antique TVs and radios. Especially when you listen to rap on an antique radio. You know they never would've imagined that would exist back when the radio was made and it just seems funny. American Idol is exactly the type of show I would think people in the 50's would've imagined people in 2018 watching, though. Like a modern version of the Ed Sullivan show or American Bandstand.
If Rap were played back in the 50's or 60's you'd have been arrested for a variety of crimes. Incitement to riot. Misogeny, foul language, just for starters.
Nice television set. I heard that RCA was the very first company that came out with the 1 1/4 inch video color reel to reel tapes system, back in 1957. I also know that they introduced the very first colortrack television technology system, during the mid 60s as well. I own an RCA Android cellular phone and I only paid $150. RCA is such a reliable company that made it throughout so many generations. Good american craftsmanship quality. Thank you for this RUclips broadcast. Johnny Montreal Canada.
This must have been a mind blowing luxury item for people in the 1950s, I remember even as a small child in the 80s, color TV was still kinda sorta a big deal. We finally ditched our black and white and got a big screen color TV when I was in first grade in 1982, and I remember thinking that was a big deal watching cartoons and Knight Rider in color. By the late 80s, color TV was the norm, but in the early 80s and even mid 80s, they still sold a lot of smaller B&Ws for cheaper prices. I'm trying to imagine the wonder and awe of people in the 1950s having a color TV like this.
@@rongendron8705 Not so much in New Zealand, colour wasn't even broadcast until '73! Even then it may have been prompted by hosting the Commonwealth Games the following year.
I remember back in the late 1960's being in awe of colour tv's. In 1968 at the age of 10 often I used to go into town just to peer into shop windows just to see programs in colour. And there was the Moon Landing. It was a wonderful optomistic time to be a kid.
I am a retired Tv tech started in the 70s with Gte Sylvania and ended with my own shop retiring 2013, saw massive change with the trade ,tvs became so cheap to buy people stopped fixing them, unless really minor repair, compelling me and other tv shops to close after many long years in business. That set you have there in the video is a beauty, was at the time the third most expensive thing that person probably owned at the time he bought it.Things changed electronics, got cheap and better who knew!
As someone who has always had an interest in electronics---I am wondering what the advent of color TV meant for service techs at the time. It must have been a HUGE learning curve. Given the complexities of an old tube-type color TV. Compared to that of a BW set at the time.
That set and I were born the same year...didn't even know there was color TV that early..... we didn't get a color set (Philco) until the mid 70's... thanks for the video
I had a CTC15 back in the 1960's. If I remember correctly I paid about $850 for it back then. In our money today this would be the equivalent to about $14,000! A new Chevrolet back in 1965 nicely equipped costed about $4100 back in the mid 1960's. It is unfortunate in a way, these old TV sets can no longer work on the broadcast systems that are now in place. A down-converter, or some type of analogue type TV distribution would be required to view the TV's of that generation. It is only a matter of time before the radio system is also changed to digital only.
Know what you mean...I bought a new '76 Chevy Impala Landau Custom in January, 1976-the sticker was $6282! An equivalent 2013 Impala runs about $29,000.
Yes in 1965, 4100$ wud get you loaded impala.. 4100$ cud really get yu into a olds in 65, if yu got the Dynamic 88, not a olds 98..My dads 68 delmont cost 3450$, light on options..
That is absolutely astounding. The color quality is superb! Hard to believe that in 1956 there were virtually no color broadcasts. I am very impressed! I would love to have one of these early color models.
Back in the era of analog TV signal broadcasting... and I'm not talking about 1956, I'm talking about 2008 ! This digital crap we have today makes me sick. Can't get a strong enough signal at the cottage, so we don't even get a slightly snowy picture like we used to, nothing at all... Damn digital crap. Now we have to buy a dish and pay a monthly fee to get anything out there, when it used to be free (paid by our taxes). And I doubt very much that even the very best TVs we can buy today will even work at all, sixty years from now ! This set is a great testament to the very high quality standards of the day. Great picture and sound, close to sixty years later !
You can just buy an ATSC amplified antenna, make sure you have it pointed in the right direction. I have not paid for TV in some 5 years now. A good antenna doesn't cost more than $80 now a days.
I agree. I have nothing but used CRTs and converter boxes in my home. I have the RCA ANT751R Outdoor Antenna (Optimized for Digital Reception) installed in the attic and receive 38 digital channels. Very good stable signals and I'm 40 miles from transmission towers. BTW, digital or analog signals, would love to have this TV.:)
Mark Szorady I live in the third world country named Canada, when it comes to over-the-air digital TV signals, with weak transmitters and wildly fluctuating radio signal strength. So, forget about a cottage 40 miles away even with the best amplified antenna. Even in a big city like Montreal, with direct line of sight to the transmitting tower, when there's a plane overhead, it's digital mosaic drop outs patterns and choppy sound time. And some channels aren't even broadcast in full HD, but only 720p. Talk about crappy. Here we have something called the CRTC, equivalent to the FCC in the States, that is supposed to serve consumers. But I suspect that it serves the cable companies by deliberately limiting the output power of over-the-air digital TV signals... I hope I'm wrong about this, but I wouldn't be surprised a bit if I'm not...
AlainHubert I can agree with some of what you point out. WFMJ TV-21 out of Youngstown limits its signal due to an agreement with a television station out of Toronto. Even though neither station occupies the same channel/bandwidth today, the agreement is still in force. Which means, if you are to the rural north of WFMJ TV-21's tower, you'll have a hard time getting its signal. But in the greater Cleveland area, the towers appear to pump out great signal and I'm located on a high area of NE Ohio, whereas Youngstown and surrounding areas are hills and valleys.
My grandfather bought an early color model RCA tv in 1959. I remember it was a big, black, metal cabinet, roundie tube, decent picture for its day, and I couldn't touch it. I could look at it, watch it, but NEVER could touch it. He had that set for 6 years and then got a Zenith color console. He gave that RCA to my aunt who had it for years. Last time I saw it, 1979, it was still working.
I remember back in the 60s when TV guides had a 'c' next to a tv program if it was in color. My family couldn't afford a color TV back then they were really expensive. But my aunt had one and when i was over at her house I would rather watch a news program than a cartoon if the news program was in color. I was easily wowed when I was a kid.
The sound and colour are really impressive. It's hard to believe it's now 60 years old!
Nah looks pretty bad tbh
@Blondie SL The little green is probably the green crt gun burnt out not the camera. This is probably a high hour set and it's very old so it's not strange that CRT is tired. The video was shot in 2008 I doubt It was done by a vcr camera, but then again the video was made by the hipster who has a room full of these very old tvs, so you might be right there is a slight chance it wasn't filmed with a digital camera at all.
@@harshnemesis Hardly a hipster. Maybe more a Loungester.
@raz AB yeah me too
Nah, very soft picture and weak colours, but hey its 64 Years old!
Wow. So cool. Most people alive now don't remember how revolutionary color TV was. Of course most people alive now do not remember when there was no TV. My dad bought a color TV because "Bonanza" was in color. It cost a LOT of money in 1965. I was thrilled because I could watch "Lost in Space" in color.
I love Lost in Space! They're re-running it here in the UK at the moment, and in fact, tonight's episode was the first colour one, the one with the earthquakes, where they finally blasted off the Jupiter 2...
We saw color in 1970.
I remember that my parents had only had a black & white TV in 1972 because color was too expensive
@@danieldaniels7571 Amazingly, the price of an average color TV back then is about the same as an average HDTV today. However, if you spent $500 for a good 21-inch console color TV in the early 1970s it would be the equivalent of $3,300 in today's money.
Around '66, a nice, older couple on our block had a super-rare color console TV. They let a 9 year-old, yours truly, watch a retina-melting episode of the hot new "Batman" show; I swear, it was combo of Eden, and an acid trip. I'll never forget it.
Extraordinary performance for the era. Too bad not a lot of color was being broadcast in 1956 but the owner would have been the envy of the neighborhood when a color program was available. Obviously WAY ahead of it's time! This was cutting edge back then.
What incredible color...especially for a 1950's set, when color tv was in its infancy. GREAT job on restoration!
When RCA got the final FCC approval for their system, the equipment was capable of producing an excellent picture. However, consumers didn't see that for another 10 years. The TK-41 color cameras produced great picture as did the sets, but only if you watched it on a closed circuit. They had not yet figured out how to transmit a stable color signal that was shielded from outside interface that required viewers to adjust the color every few minutes. Several innovations were developed that overcame these problems and allowed the public to see just how good color TV really was. By 1964, sales of color sets started to take off. The researchers and technicians at RCA did an incredible job. In fact, the NTSC system that was originally derided all over the world because of it's initial instabilities, wasn't really tossed aside when we switched to digital HDTV. It's still the basis for producing a color image.
......
I remember about the old tv's is the smell of the heating tubes or electronics, you can't smell on RUclips :-)
I can, too. It's like the smell of old books, or the Christmas ornaments in their old boxes...
@@GioveseSan The perfume of the world gone away.
Or as EEVBlog would say: " this ain't smellavision"
Same with old radios. Also i remember high pitch whistle.
I didn't know it that smell was my grandparents or the tv!!!! :-) joking
I'm already getting mild nostalgic feelings about the video itself--which was shot in the days when there was still over-the-air analog TV.
I got hit by a wave of nostalgia from the comercials they played. I remember watching all of them way to vividly now
Things like this just get me mad at the FCC all over again.
The quality of TV's have increased thru the years while the quality of what they show on those TV's has become non-existent.
I think you got it right.
Debatable - your Visio isn't going to be working or repairable in 60 yrs. Hell, not even in 6 yrs
@@atariforever2002 Well content is a very subjective thing anyway but most of the shows but not all of them are pretty crappy there are a few good ones.
Tv shows aren't all bad, but hey if you don't like them well tg we have youtube!
@@mootpoint7053 Yes and thats what i do when there are no good shows on Tv.
All that wonderful mid-century technology survived to see......American Idol. It probably wanted to explode!
yea...should have been "Love That Bob" or Ozzie and Harriet"
This surviving set deserves better programming, Peter Gunn,for example. (sure It's slightly newer than this set and B/W but a faithful to the era test of the "color kller" and would not offend the 'ol girl!)
at first I was going to say "77 Sunsst Strip" but then I remembered the TV was a 1956 model.
inkey2 Since electronics of this era were expected to last 5-8 years, You're choice is still valid.
OH YEAH>>>>>GOOD POINT
anyone else remember that wonderful aroma of a hot wooden TV cabinet. If you left the TV on long enough there would be this sweet aroma of warm wood and hot electronics
inkey2 sadly I was born in 2002. I love mid century modern (50s) when I get my own place I will have 50s furniture and tech (I hope)
Ah, the magic of old tube TVs. I also remember the sound coming on before the picture, and the little white dot in the center of the screen when you turned the set off.
Absolutely! When I was a kid, At night I was always sticking my head around back to see the MAGIC AND A LITTLE SCARY GLOW of the tubes.and awesome smell of hot electronics!! I still get my fix from a 1954 Zenith am fm phonograph console that works perfectly.has the cobramatic turn table too. My great uncle left it to me when he passed in 1994, at 100!! He knew how much I liked it . He bought it new..it has lots of glowing tubes and the familiar odor that goes with it. I also have several Zenith table top radios, one from 1961, the other 1964. Both tube types, and playing well. Also have a 1941 Zenith floor model radio that belonged to my mother's parent's. She told me on December 7, 1941 when pearl harbor was bombed, everyone listened to everything happening on THAT RADIO! Still works!!
Very good point....
Ozone too
Wow, it actually blows me away how good the picture looks on this set! I'd wager that there are very few sets like this around today that still work this flawlessly. I hope this set is still in good shape after 14 years.
worked for an rca dealer in the 60's. bought a used ctc15 console and remember changing the sulphide crt for a newer rebuilt rare earth model. thrilled my new mrs.
first program we watched together was "family affair" with the intro kaleidoscope pattern. those were the days for a young married tech.
barry.
Fantastic. Its a credit to you for doing the restoration work. The picture & sound are excellent. The CRT was obviously built to last. A piece of History to admire!
In reality, the round 21" tubes lasted between 5 and 10 years when used daily. I changed a hundred of them easy. Of course, there are many for whatever reason just defied physics it seems and ran much longer. My dad's CTC11 needed it's original sulfide phosphor tube changed around 1969 (ten years) and the replacement tube (hi lite phosphor) went to 1977 before we scrapped the TV for an XL-100.
As a kid I remember all the TV repairmen made house calls to work on the floor model TVs, which everyone seemed to have. He would carry in 2 huge tool chests full of every kind of tube to fit the different TVs. One by one the repairman would take out each tube and test it, then put it back in the TV until he found the one that had burned out.
In my early days I was servicing CTC15 and later models. I am in my mid 70s now. I serviced so many of them. This goes back a bit over 50 years ago for me. Back in the days of these TV sets the RCA was among the best of the available TV sets.
ok mr tums
Let me add a little history...My Dad was an RCA dealer and we had the very first color TV in town, he also sold the first color tv in town and I grew up in the business and running the business till 1985. The very first color TVs used a vertical chassis and the top of the cabinet was hinged, it would raise up for servicing, they had a boat load of tubes and your TV tech was your best friend! At first there was only one hour of color TV broadcast per week, RCA owned NBC and talked Disney into being the first program, Disney's Wonderful World of Color was the name as I recall. Color broadcasting slowly increased over the years, but exploded when RCA finally licensed other manufacturers to make their own color TVs, I'm not sure about the year but it would have been about 1966 I believe. When I started selling color TVs RCA was the only one, but about the time I was in college they licensed it, every color TV of the time had a notice: Built under license from RCA Victor. One other small detail, growing up around a TV repair shop, the owner's name written on the chassis means that at some time the chassis was removed from the cabinet and taken to the shop for service, we used paper tags but some techs just wrote the customer's name right on the chassis.
This made me feel young and I’m old !!! Lol, I was born in 1989 and by the time I was 3 years old I was using a remote control and a random Sony Vega in the early 90’s, never met an 80’s wooden tv, without remote, all I knew was black plastic tv’s of the 90’s, vhs, handycam, windows 3.1, etc etc since I was a baby, my generation is truly not young anymore and we have never seen an original record player, we had to re-invent them to see them working as a retro trend !! Like it’s a piece of art from a museum
I graduated high school in 1989 so I'm a bit older than you. I was lucky in the sense that growing up in the late 70s/early 80s, I basically had the same electronic experience my parents did. Console TVs, eight track players, tons of radios from big to handheld. The first new tech experience for the whole family was in 1977 when we bought the first Sears Telegames unit (a.k.a. Atari 2600).
Having said that, I also was young enough to enjoy "new" tech like affordable VCRs, home computers (got my first Apple IIc in 1985), and of course the internet. So in a way I had the best of BOTH worlds, unlike the kids today who never operated a reel-to-reel player, or an 8-track player.
@@BlackAndWhiteBand I graduated in ‘88 and still use my 8-track player daily.
We had that exact TV in 1959, and were the first in our entire neighborhood to have color TV. The only differences I can see is that ours would swivel left & right, and our front control panel's door had a spring to flip it closed. On top was my dad's Heathkit FM radio, that he wired to the TV's speaker. I bought my parents their first microwave in 1978, and my mom wouldn't let it in the house. In 1980 I gave my dad a video camera and VCR. I'm glad I did. I have home moves since then, starting when I was 25. I'm 65 now, and have few friends with home vids that are that old. Thanks for sharing this video!
What happened to that colour TV? Did you get rid of it? (And if you did, when and where?) Does it still work? (If it doesn’t, when did it and will you fix it?) Lastly, why did you get it in the first place?
@@empireOfcHiNa8888 - My parents disposed of it when multiple "tubes" began failing. We then got a Magnavox with "the works in a drawer" so you could pull-out circuit panels and replace them easily. I got my first color TV in 1978, RCA, and it was still working when I disposed of it in 2020; although, I couldn't watch broadcast TV anymore because of HD. We used it solely to play my Atari 2600 games. My dad got our first color TV so we could watch "The Wizard of Oz" and Macy's Thanksgiving parades in color.
It's amazing to think 65 years ago someone brought that TV home, bran new, from the store. The kids were probably on the floor watching it for hours, the next day their friends came over and were amazed. So many stories that tv could tell over 65 years....
That is so cool! Nice to see an old TV like that still working. 60 years old by now! Modern TVs will never last that long.
Modern TV's will, but the idiotic superficial society won't let them. Fucking millenials gotta get a new TV every 5 months because their old one is not cool anymore.
Its easy to do that nowadays. Electronics this day and age are much cheaper in comparison to electronics from many years ago. I bet that TV originally sold for a families months wages back then!
cowtippingrocks
I was watching some 50's sitcom,I think it was Bachelor Father, in one episode I think he said he was saving up for a year to buy a TV. He had a little jar he kept putting small amounts of money into.
Nowadays we would whip out the plastic regardless of if we had the money... and would probably never had it paid off by the time it broke down and had to buy another one.
Built to be biodegradable
That is surely a beautiful television, thanks for giving it the love it deserves!👍
Motorola offered the first rectangular 25" color TV sets in 1964. Picture tubes were made by National Video; I had the great honor of removing 2 safety screws from the back of a brand-new set and the back broke the tube neck at the socket. Had to go and exchange tube and re-install it. In those days we had to go thru the process of convergence which was quite elaborate and it could take 30 minutes or more. We used a pattern selector to accomplish this.
What's interesting is that many of us were still watching black and white tvs in the early 1980s.!
The good old days of staring at the end of an atomic particle accelerator.
at or near 15 KeV!
And the good old days of listening to vinyl records that popped and skipped and you had to turn them over to hear the other side. I remember one vinyl record I bought that when I opened it, there was no music on the disk. It was just a blank vinyl disc with no grooves, not even a hole for the spindle. I took it back to the store and they couldn’t believe it either. 🙄🤭 They did exchange it for another copy of the record . They opened it in the store to make sure it was a good record.
I had a brother who was mentally retarded. He had a habit of filling his mouth with water and spitting it on stuff. One time he spit a mouth full of water into the back of our TV set. Was not pretty what happened next! 🤭😱
@@glennso47 Breaking News! "Good old days" are back. Vinyl is selling again and very well (and ~2X the price of CDs). Go figure.
and the X-rays out the back, and the emr like wifi.
This is so cool! Seriously like a weird time warp, It's like watching the future
The picture quality is amazing. Cool stuff!
You have done an amazing job! Still working after all these years, seems to me like a miracle.
I remember working on these. You did a Great Job on convergence. Also it appears that you got the Purity Magnets set well. Great Job. Jim
Imagine the history of the shows that families watched on this tv. If dad was like most of us dads he probably watched a lot of sports on it. Cool bit of history. Thanks for sharing with us.
One thing I find impressive, apart from the fact that the TV is functioning perfectly, is that the camera didn’t do that shutter speed illusion where there’s a rolling line on the CRT screen
The camera used is recording at a completely different (faster) frame-rate than the television's reception at 29.95 fps.
@@SoundJudgment no, because then there would be a rolling line on the CRT and there is not. So the camera and CRT are probably at the same or a very similar frame rate. The camera is probably recording in NTSC or something, since the video is also 480 rows.
That illusion usually comes when the exposure time is very short (so short that one can see what's happening). Longer exposure time helps to fix it.
Love it. It's great to see people who have this passion for keeping old tech going. I like doing this with computers when I can, and I love old 30s, 40s and 50s radios and 60s HiFi equipment. But TVs, wow!
kudos to you for saving these mid-century treasures. like me....you are an old soul who takes care of the past...because most people dont care!
I had a CTC-15 Color set. I believe it was from about 1964 if I remember correctly. Back in 64 the set cost about $900. Back then this was very expensive! When everything was working properly and reception was good the pictures and sound was very good. RCA was one of the better TV sets during these times.
Nice old set. I remember fixing one of those when I started my TV repair career in 1982.
I used to have a Philips K6, but a worker broke the picture tube working at my place so it went in the bin.
1957 Incredible!! At this time here in Spain we have only a few black and white TV receivers mostly kits for assembling in a radio repair services and the color TV appear at middle of 70's with brands like a Philips,Telefunken,Saba and others. Congratulations your TV looks nice and have a incredible good image and sound without semiconductors, only tubes. This TVs are made for during a lot of years and today is impossible made something like this. I also repair old radios and TVs but this is it a little jewel from the great USA. Thanks and Like.
That was fun to watch. Thanks for doing this.
Wow beautiful color on that classic set. Great job! The cabinet is still nice too. Of course now in 2021 there are no more color analog signals being broadcast, so those wonderful old circuits are officially retired. But it’s the engineering of something so solid that it could function 100% 65 years later with little maintenance that truly impresses. Our grandfathers really knew what they were doing.
Amazing color too. If I had one of these i'd use it everyday for watching modern broadcasting. Love these old sets.
I'm 23 years old but I grown up with a TV set from the 70s that was like a piece of furniture. I think it was made by RCA. I remember that I constantly needed to adjust the color and had many good times playing my sega genesis on it.
NBC, owned by RCA, did most of the early color broadcasting to help promote sales of receivers. CBS, who lost a patent battle with RCA over its mechanical color TV process (a real "Rube Goldberg" system that, unlike RCA's color, could not be received as a B/W picture) actively fought against color; while cash-poor ABC simply couldn't afford color equipment. Some individual local stations did adopt color for local programs. Thanks for sharing this wonderful old TV set!
I absolutely love seeing vintage items like this. Great demo of it. Thanks for sharing.
I didn't know the USA had colour TV in the 1950's. Here in Australia we got colour TV in 1975 using the PAL standed and we don't have a tint control on the CRT TV's.
Westinghouse introduced a color set in 1954. I believe it's one one of the earliest commercial (as opposed to experimental) NTSC models in the US.
Sean are you sure? I'm from New Zealand and we got colour tv in 1973 (in time for the commonwealth games that was held here). I'm sure Australia was earlier like the late 60s.
However though the broadcasts were in colour, I think my family brought their first colour set in the early to mid 80s due to the cost.
In Australia, colour broardcast was officially launched in Australia on March 1 1975 using the PAL system
Jügren van der Kaas
Australia had B/W TV from around 1956 or 57.
Yes, although it wasn't very common in the U.S. until the late 1960s/70s. My dad, who was born in 1958, said his family didn't own a color TV until 1972.
That's a beauty! I'm a ex-TV man now in commercial audio, but when I started in the business, I worked for a used tv shop that sold CTC 5's for $75-100 each (1970 dollars). The sets they sold were mostly trade-in's from a large RCA dealer.
Wow, astonishing work! From this video it looks like you've done an amazing job on convergence, geometry, raster sizing and h/v alignment. Really nice set!
Oh my God, I'm loving this! For the age this TV set has, the picture and sound are wonderful. I bet that the current flat screen TVs won't be able to show a picture 60 years from now - they are changing the standards every few years: half HD, Full HD, 4K, 8K, 12K...H.264, H.265...DVB-T, DVB-T2, etc...while many TV channels in the world are still broadcasting in 4:3 aspect ratio.
A very good job done restoring this old set and the colours shown seemed quite stable and natural. What I'd like to know is, back in 1956 would this set have been able to display as good pictures as in your demonstration given that back then the tv cameras and transmission systems were not as good as now? I've heard that in the early days the colour signal on Ntsc was always drifting and true colour would then be lost particularly in poor reception areas and certain weather conditions resulting in noticeably yellowish or green skin tones for example.
As a 10 yr old in 1965, I remember my neighbor across the street had a color tv. At night you could see color reflecting from inside the house. I could only imagine how nice it must be to see color television back then
congratz! it's a nice tv, even still today!
Beautiful. Colour TV in 1956...the same year that TV transmissions started here in Australia. While you guys were watching colour TV we got a grainy B&W picture of, "Good evening, and welcome to Television." And flash forward to now...we're still behind the times.
Forgotten fact--American analog tv system had a horizontal scan rate of 15,750 Hz. The horizontal sweep transformer in the set consequently vibrated, or "hummed," at this frequency, producing an audio tone that could be heard by children but not adults. As a kid, I could tell by listening if the television was on, even if the sound was turned off.
Hopelessand Forlorn I remember walking into a room or computer lab and hearing a TV or monitor on somewhere. I would search around until I found it and turned it off. My father could not relate.
Hopelessand Forlorn That is so wierd, I remember being able to hear the old tv's when powered on but no picture or sound. It was extremely high pitched.
I used to fix TV's way back then. Sometimes we used to wedge wood chips into the flyback transformers to quiet the vibration.
same as me!
Hopelessand Forlorn me too. But i was born in the 80's. Did tvs back then hum too?
I remember around 1958 going to the house of a friend of my grandparents just so we could watch color TV. We saw Dinah Shore's show in color.
Amazing, absolutely amazing that picture looks that good for as old as that tube is. Good work.
Outstanding restoration job. Rare breed of vanishing technicians, at this age of throw away culture. Makes me feel young looking back at yesterday.
That was an incredible picture and Sound for the age of the TV.
Linearity both vertical and horizontally from what can be seen without a grid pattern was spot on.
Did you have to adjust it at all by using the CRT neck adjusters?
That could be used today full time, the CRT didn't look tired at all.
Good restoration job.
Hello, there was no replies in 6 years so I am just here to change that
that's crazy, just how well that unit works still, you'd never see any modern tv last this long
2008= Timely demostration.Try this a couple of years later: no analog broadcasting anymore...
Dirty_Horror A beef a lot of people have with cable is that although you get a lot of channels, many of the SD channels are still analog. Because it's a closed system, they do not have to abide by the mandate.
It's still possible to demostrate working of this type of TV while having RF modulator or using cable analog TV. Anyway I think that analog broadcasting was shut down too early.
BilisNegra I think the analog feed is completely gone in my area- Boston, Ma.
you can use a converter
Ever used a converter? Dumbass.
Beautiful restoration. It looks new. That has great color for a 57 year old TV. The original family of the TV must have been very extravagant and rich. In 1956 color broadcasting only averaged about ten hours a week in the U.S. The money they paid for that set when it was new would be the same as spending $12,500 today.
Nice restore and awesome convergence job! I always loved 'roundies' because the phosphors they used in the crts had accurate hues, especially red. The rectangular crts had a brighter picture, but the red phosphors were orange-red in hue and they 'fudged' the color demodulators to try and compensate.
Dipende dai sistemi utilizzati di trasmissione NTSC, PAL, SECAM l SECAM G, come colori anche ora con i multistandard il migliore come definizione è il francese SECAM anche nei LED, OLED e 4k
I LOVE mid-century anything really but especially electronics. and it was nice to see you at 5:11. You're very handsome.
THAT is amazing.
The right person would pay you a lot of money for one of those.
What a beautiful TV! I had a roundie B&W Muntz, but the picture tube was damaged sadly, always wished I could have gotten that TV to work. I ended up giving it away for parts.
As a kid I remember watching Disney's Wonderful World of Color. Sponsored by RCA no doubt to sell color TV's. It worked. I also remember adjusting hue and tint to get right picture. Bonanza was another big deal.
Bonanza also was to sell color tv even though it was sponsored by Chevy.
Great memory, thanks! I so remember these from my childhood. Sadly I also remember when TVs of this era were put out front for trash pickup.
If my memory serves me correctly, I remember gathering in a friends house (in those days the invitation was worded, "wanna come over tonight and watch color TV?") - no mention of any specific program, just whatever was available. But the beautiful images on your restored set are thanks to a lot of technology that has taken place since then. In the early days, they had not yet perfected stage lighting among other things and I remember the live broadcasts where as people walked around the stage they would change from amber to green and we would be constantly trying to adjust the set as the program went on because of the constant fluctuation.
My mom says the same thing.....they would watch tv on a friend's color set.
I remember having to constsntly sdjust it to get good picture.. Didn SEE a color tv till late 60#
Great job done there. Years ago, in NZ with assistance I put together a VCR97 Oscilliscope tube TV set in green! It took a NZTV technician to finally get it going but eventually after a couple of dry Summers and static electrical discharge episodes I decided the punishment was too much. It went out into the garage.
Bravo to you Sir.
The 4K TV of the fifties..awesome picture and sound , but little, if any media sources...nice work...
Back in the old days people actually talked to each other - when there was nothing on TV to watch. And kids, we played outside all day with no electronic devices. I don't know how we survived? :-)
Alan Spicer We didn't have a TV in our house until 1966. Some of my best childhood memories are those years before the TV came along. I had 3 brothers and 2 sisters and we were never bored. We occupied our time playing cards, reading and just talking. The TV came along and all of the sudden our family is fighting about what to watch.
Alan Spicer same here
Alan Spicer my generation (millenial) was the very last to experience analog tv, i remember watching WGBY and WEDH kids shows untill 6 when all the boring adult stuff would come on lol and then i would go outside to play
Just NBC prime time. I got my first HDTV in 2007, and it was similar with very little being broadcast in HD at the time. I’ve had a 4K TV for 3 years and still no 4K broadcasts yet.
I had a 24" dumont color TV in the very early 60s. The houselight dimmed when I turned it on amd the picture tube would crackle when the high voltage was applied. My dad worked for the Dumont network, later became Metromedia
In today's dollars this TV set would be costing in the range of $14,000. Only people who were fairly well off would buy a TV like this.
With these TV sets if all the components are in proper spec and in good condition, and including all the alignments are in proper set up, the pictures are excellent.
At least here in the UK it was common to hire televisions - from Granada and Radio Rentals (microwave ovens too). Right up until the late 1970s. My generation has mobile phone charges, older people hired televisions.
yeah...you had to be a doctor, lawyer or bank robber to afford a TV like that back in the day
You are indeed right, most of us British peasants could not afford tobuy colour tv's back in the early 70's, and so had to rent one as youmentioned. Prices of consumer electronics have come right downsince then, mainly due to cheap imports from China. This has madeit possible for most now to buy them outright.
the first 2 TV sets my family had were given to us by financially better off relatives. The tv's didn't last long as they were old when we got them. The first new TV we bought was a real odd-ball my dad got at a warehouse sale. It was a Sylvania table top model, blonde wood cabinet and had this white plastic frame around the picture tube that lighted up when you turned on the set. That TV was JUNK and died in 4 years. Then we bought an RCA, B&W console on legs. That was a good TV. It lasted at least 10 years
I think the previous owner of this TV appreciated paying a lot of money and looked after it - these days tv sets are so cheap they are almost disposable ....
Wow, congrats on the rebuild...that's a beautiful set!
My dad purchase one of these RCA sets in 1958, I remember watching many colour programs when I was very small, we lived in Havana and I think that only the U.S. and Cuba had colour television back in the 50's. Some time before we left Havana in the early 60's Tele-Color, channel 12 went off the air and didn't come back until 1975 I hear.
Cuba aired the first color show on March 19, 1958. I remember the sets in the stores. They were very expensive compared to black and white receivers.
When Castro took power, he destroyed most of Cuba.
I am a retired Broadcast Engineer in America. The station I retired from did not have color until 1964, six years after Cuba.
You are very lucky for leaving Cuba so early.
Amazing. Picture quality is simply unbelievable. That's a technical masterpiece.
The picture looks so clear!
I agree although all TV pictures, even low definition 405 / 525 line standards, look good on a small screen…
I was a one year old baby in 1956. Very impressive it getting that good of color on a 61 year old TV. Good job restoring it.
My family had 2 color televisions back in 1955. And my dad drove a Delorean. Wait.... That was a movie. Nevermind.
+David James A DELOREAN!
PogChamp!!!!!!!!
Great Scott!
Space bastard.
😂😂
2! Showoff
Our first color TV had a "Color Pilot". It was a light on the front of the set to let you know when a program was being broadcast in color. I never understood the concept. 😄
Beautiful fluid looking color picture, I feel like I'm watching TV through the wicked witch's crystal ball, ha ha..
Many of us forget what analog looks and sounds like. Thanks for sharing!
We had one in '56. After we watched the Wizard of Oz and a Disney show, my mother made my dad take it back. She thought the electric bill would be too high.
Disney didn't present any color episodes until he began "THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF COLOR" on NBC in 1961. ABC telecast Disney's weekly series in black and white only. You must have seen something else that looked like a "Disney" program. Not too many color programs were telecast when this model was introduced.
@@fromthesidelines I was quite a youngster at the time. And the folks who I could have questioned further about other shows are long gone. I'll just have to say, whatever. Thanks for your reply.
You're very welcome. :)
you could afford a colour tv in the 50s? were you guys practical millionaires? colour sets were insanely expensive. it wasnt until the late 70s even my parents could get a colour tv
@@kynansmusic9724 you are so right. We got a used color TV in either 1978 or early 1979.
That's really a big fun to watch an old TVset! Has it occurred to me that watching a modern show on that old TVset looks like to watch a future from the present moment? :)
Those TV set are very strong it's about 60 years old and the picture is crystal clear very cool bro
Yeah, but where do you get those old valve tubes when one eventually breaks.This set was from an age before the transistor was invented.
You have the same problem with transistors. I've got amplifiers here from the 70/80s that have obsoleted or discontinued parts.
I imagine tubes are a bit more forgiving when it comes to equivalents.
The transistor came out in 1947.
True, but it took a few years to get the production right. The first generation of transistors were rather expensive, not very reliable, and would not carry the current needed for the line/frame timebase circuits in a telly.
@@BadWolf762 So, why was it not used in
mainstream electronics until the late 50's
early 60's. Here in the UK everything was
valve tube technology, although you Yanks
were always a step ahead of us Brits.
I was like "wait, how is it getting signal from an outdoor antenna without a digital converter!?!?"
then I realized this video is TWELVE YEARS OLD!
Looks like a beautiful restoration. This was the very latest thing in home entertainment back in the day. Very few homes had a color TV in 1956. I wonder what the cost would have been in today's dollars?
$4800.00, based on a $500 TV. I think there were even more expensive models.
@@davidh9844 Bet people were glad they were built to last
Similar to those people that can have a 50” plasma screen when they first came out.
Enjoyed the flash back video! Back when I was in high school I was given a non working CT100 RCA. I cant remember how many $$$$$$ I spent (from lawn mowing money) trying to fix it, as I wanted to experience watching color tv. At that time color programing was very limited, even in the SF bay area. Anyway, your video brought back memories.
I eventually got it running, but it didn't look as good as yours. Shortly afterwards the red gun went south.
It's always weird to me to see modern music or TV shows on antique TVs and radios. Especially when you listen to rap on an antique radio. You know they never would've imagined that would exist back when the radio was made and it just seems funny. American Idol is exactly the type of show I would think people in the 50's would've imagined people in 2018 watching, though. Like a modern version of the Ed Sullivan show or American Bandstand.
Melissa0774 More like a modern version of "The Original Ameteur Hour" or "Star Search"
Surprise it’s still working. HAHA. Make me wants to know ttheir reaction
In those days. Lol.
If Rap were played back in the 50's or 60's you'd have been arrested for a variety of crimes. Incitement to riot. Misogeny, foul language, just for starters.
Nice television set. I heard that RCA was the very first company that came out with the 1 1/4 inch video color reel to reel tapes system, back in 1957. I also know that they introduced the very first colortrack television technology system, during the mid 60s as well. I own an RCA Android cellular phone and I only paid $150. RCA is such a reliable company that made it throughout so many generations. Good american craftsmanship quality. Thank you for this RUclips broadcast. Johnny Montreal Canada.
I hope to one day watch this vid on my 100" 8K HDR 3D UHD TV
3D. lol
Wow. In 1956, many people were still buying their first B&W set. Was there even any colour programming in '56?
This must have been a mind blowing luxury item for people in the 1950s, I remember even as a small child in the 80s, color TV was still kinda sorta a big deal. We finally ditched our black and white and got a big screen color TV when I was in first grade in 1982, and I remember thinking that was a big deal watching cartoons and Knight Rider in color. By the late 80s, color TV was the norm, but in the early 80s and even mid 80s, they still sold a lot of smaller B&Ws for cheaper prices. I'm trying to imagine the wonder and awe of people in the 1950s having a color TV like this.
Color t.v. was virtually the norm to buy, by 1970! Smaller b/w/
sets were relegated to portables, which got very cheap by
1980 or so! I'm 76!
@@rongendron8705 Not so much in New Zealand, colour wasn't even broadcast until '73! Even then it may have been prompted by hosting the Commonwealth Games the following year.
I remember back in the late 1960's being in awe of colour tv's.
In 1968 at the age of 10 often I used to go into town just to
peer into shop windows just to see programs in colour. And
there was the Moon Landing. It was a wonderful optomistic
time to be a kid.
Imagine watching some smart tv commercial through this 1956 masterpiece.. that would be irony
I am a retired Tv tech started in the 70s with Gte Sylvania and ended with my own shop retiring 2013, saw massive change with the trade ,tvs became so cheap to buy people stopped fixing them, unless really minor repair, compelling me and other tv shops to close after many long years in business. That set you have there in the video is a beauty, was at the time the third most expensive thing that person probably owned at the time he bought it.Things changed electronics,
got cheap and better who knew!
As someone who has always had an interest in electronics---I am wondering what the advent of color TV meant for service techs at the time. It must have been a HUGE learning curve. Given the complexities of an old tube-type color TV. Compared to that of a BW set at the time.
Back when u could still try old sets like that one without a dtv converter box! #NTSC
That set and I were born the same year...didn't even know there was color TV that early..... we didn't get a color set (Philco) until the mid 70's... thanks for the video
Here's to the early adopter. Brave, adventurous, rich.
Pretty neat to see spray capacitors. My mom used to work in the factory in Barre Vermont 1950 60s 70s.
I had a CTC15 back in the 1960's. If I remember correctly I paid about $850 for it back then. In our money today this would be the equivalent to about $14,000! A new Chevrolet back in 1965 nicely equipped costed about $4100 back in the mid 1960's.
It is unfortunate in a way, these old TV sets can no longer work on the broadcast systems that are now in place. A down-converter, or some type of analogue type TV distribution would be required to view the TV's of that generation. It is only a matter of time before the radio system is also changed to digital only.
Know what you mean...I bought a new '76 Chevy Impala Landau Custom in January, 1976-the sticker was $6282! An equivalent 2013 Impala runs about $29,000.
Digital TV is much worse than analog!
King Bee funny how TVs have got so much better and cheaper while cars are still just cars and cost so much much more
Yes in 1965, 4100$ wud get you loaded impala.. 4100$ cud really get yu into a olds in 65, if yu got the Dynamic 88, not a olds 98..My dads 68 delmont cost 3450$, light on options..
That is absolutely astounding. The color quality is superb! Hard to believe that in 1956 there were virtually no color broadcasts. I am very impressed! I would love to have one of these early color models.
Back in the era of analog TV signal broadcasting... and I'm not talking about 1956, I'm talking about 2008 ! This digital crap we have today makes me sick. Can't get a strong enough signal at the cottage, so we don't even get a slightly snowy picture like we used to, nothing at all... Damn digital crap. Now we have to buy a dish and pay a monthly fee to get anything out there, when it used to be free (paid by our taxes).
And I doubt very much that even the very best TVs we can buy today will even work at all, sixty years from now ! This set is a great testament to the very high quality standards of the day. Great picture and sound, close to sixty years later !
You can just buy an ATSC amplified antenna, make sure you have it pointed in the right direction. I have not paid for TV in some 5 years now. A good antenna doesn't cost more than $80 now a days.
I agree. I have nothing but used CRTs and converter boxes in my home. I have the RCA ANT751R Outdoor Antenna (Optimized for Digital Reception) installed in the attic and receive 38 digital channels. Very good stable signals and I'm 40 miles from transmission towers. BTW, digital or analog signals, would love to have this TV.:)
Mark Szorady
I live in the third world country named Canada, when it comes to over-the-air digital TV signals, with weak transmitters and wildly fluctuating radio signal strength. So, forget about a cottage 40 miles away even with the best amplified antenna. Even in a big city like Montreal, with direct line of sight to the transmitting tower, when there's a plane overhead, it's digital mosaic drop outs patterns and choppy sound time. And some channels aren't even broadcast in full HD, but only 720p. Talk about crappy. Here we have something called the CRTC, equivalent to the FCC in the States, that is supposed to serve consumers. But I suspect that it serves the cable companies by deliberately limiting the output power of over-the-air digital TV signals... I hope I'm wrong about this, but I wouldn't be surprised a bit if I'm not...
AlainHubert I can agree with some of what you point out. WFMJ TV-21 out of Youngstown limits its signal due to an agreement with a television station out of Toronto. Even though neither station occupies the same channel/bandwidth today, the agreement is still in force. Which means, if you are to the rural north of WFMJ TV-21's tower, you'll have a hard time getting its signal. But in the greater Cleveland area, the towers appear to pump out great signal and I'm located on a high area of NE Ohio, whereas Youngstown and surrounding areas are hills and valleys.
I live in Canada as well, and the CRTC is a fuck up
My grandfather bought an early color model RCA tv in 1959. I remember it was a big, black, metal cabinet, roundie tube, decent picture for its day, and I couldn't touch it. I could look at it, watch it, but NEVER could touch it. He had that set for 6 years and then got a Zenith color console. He gave that RCA to my aunt who had it for years. Last time I saw it, 1979, it was still working.
Oh yeah... fixing the tube convergence is always fun. [/sarcasm]
But I can cap a TV chassis like there's no tomorrow. :)
I remember back in the 60s when TV guides had a 'c' next to a tv program if it was in color. My family couldn't afford a color TV back then they were really expensive. But my aunt had one and when i was over at her house I would rather watch a news program than a cartoon if the news program was in color. I was easily wowed when I was a kid.
I can remember the issue where they switched from using the C to BW. 72 or 73
Yea i never SAW a colorbtv till late 60s