Lets NOT Play With Electricity If a home is "historical" and able to be restored in a reasonable manner it should be the law that it must be done that way.
I hate to see that happen. There's a Gausthaus that was knocked down that was beautiful traditionally built, the owner sold it to a construction company after his brother died and he said he couldn't continue ro run the Gausthaus. Everyone knew the place at the corner, it was very recognizable. Its sad his brother died and it was sold to a construction company who decided to further "modernize" the area around Milwaukee with more new ugly buildings, yay! They are putting a Starbucks and Panda Express at least, I wouldnt go to either one. Everything seems to be getting replaced or remodeled, some for no good reson directly
watershed44 I think thats a great idea, my grandmother thought it already was like that in some way but I guess theres a lot of things that organizations cant do, theres too many buildings and structures and the law allows this duscusting act of desruction so it would be hard for them to do something about it. It should be the law to keep these buildings
Sad to see a old house go down. In my town, you can drive to any newer part and see a row of houses and they all look the same. Some are really close to each other, almost wouldn't be any different than an apartment. Then you can drive to the older parts of town and see immaculate old houses built from the late 1890's to early 1900's and all in really nice shape as their owners realize what they've got. Plus, no two are alike either, they each have a special style all their own. Fun video!
I have been finding a lot stuff with rubbing voice coils and damaged speakers. BandersenTV uses Anne's Crazy Glue in the brown bottle from JoAnne fabrics, mostly due to being water soluble and able to be revised and repaired further later. Maybe water soluble Elmer's glue would work too. I used to use contact cement, but you basically need organic solvent if you are going to revise it. I use cotton balls and string to try to brace a speaker with a badly rubbing voice coil. A trick I learned out of the back of an old radio I found. I do love to get them running on as much original equipment as possible.
Veedol was part of Tidewater Oil, which owned Flying A stations. My father worked at a Flying A as supplemental income in the 1960s when he first started at Boeing. Nowadays you'd have to have corporate HR approve the moonlighting. They would probably say no after doing a detailed conflict of interest review.
Not the same "Veedol", David. You're thinking of the "ASA Veedol" / Veedol Int.Ltd, which is not the same company. "Old" Veedol got bought up by B-P in the 50's. So, while not the same as a Zombie brand, it's not the same company. At best the connection between the two is very loose. .
20w oil was used in ford modal a and t s. the oil is detergent oil heavy duty witch has zddp. it is probably from 40s as detergent oil was developed for military. still old. to bad all that cool old stuff is gone. so sad. I do not no how you do not get freaked out from all the dust and debris in old buildings as the old plater has asbestos and led in it. well keep up the good work.
My house was built in 1926, Dutch Colonial (it actually looks like the house in the late 70's Amityville Horror movie except mine is 2 1/2 story as opposed to a full three story) I love these old houses. Although mine has a few drawbacks I suppose, no ceiling lights in the living room, floor lamps are the solution in my case. Also no framed exterior walls, just two layers of brick (the exterior is standard brick and the inner layer of brick is the old I think 6x6 clay brick) with plaster applied over the inner layer for the interior finish not too much insulation factor there, lol. Nine foot ceilings, mahogany staircase and oak floors. Also it just dawned on me what this channel reminds me of! It is the Roadkill of old electronics!! LOL. Great save!!
That's a really cool radio. The story behind it is even better. I laughed really hard about that spray magic. That old house was amazing. You won't ever get craftsmanship like that again.
Hi there, and welcome to Mr. Shango's lab! Today we are going to be plugging in a rat feces infested tube radio, and seeing if it catches fire.... If you're following along, remember you're doing so at your own risk. Just take care...
Lots of nostalgia there! Veedol motor oil was the private label brand for Flying A gas stations. The last time I saw a Flying A product was the battery in my first car, a '65 Plymouth, It lasted all nine years I had the car. Great video, every time I see an old Zenith product come to life I get a lump in my throat. A great American company killed by cheap foreign crap.
I have the same Zenith model. The clock just died on mine and the speaker rattles after it's been on awhile. Thanks for the tip on how to fix the speaker. My Zenith picks up KNX 1070 at night here in Sacramento.
Great rescues. They are tearing down old (100+ year old) houses left and right around where I live (suburb of St.Paul MN). They've been donating many of the old houses to the fire department for practice burns. A few years ago they burnt down a brick 1906 house at the end of my block, and then within a year or two, they burnt down an 1850s all brick farm house with original outbuildings (not common in this area anymore). In the years before that I can recall seeing or hearing about several other old houses. These houses were not abandoned or in great disrepair. Mind you this area was heavily developed between the 1950s to 1980s, so most of the houses around here date between those years. They have since crammed multifamily homes onto the lots those old houses stood.
I'll bet the buildings that replaced those houses would have provided much more exciting "practice burns". With sprinkler requirements, some fireproofing codes that would otherwise apply are waived and with all the light trusses in attics these days, many modern buildings are one spark away from becoming a bonfire. They will become death traps when they age and their sprinkler systems start to fail.
Isn't Madonna approaching 60 now, how time flies. I remember her videos on MTV (remember that) when she was very young looking. She came out with all the music videos I liked and saved them all on my Betamax...
When I was a kid, in the early 80's Oldies were songs from the late 60's and early 70's and back... so originally they used that to mean songs that were only like 15 years old! I'll bet there's a name for that 'effect' but yeah it always bugs me out too. By that same standard a song from Demi Lovato would be an Oldie now. A Lady Gaga song would be an Oldie. Back then though, I guess Rock and Roll had only been around 25 years, so something 15 years old was an Oldie. Funny how time flies! Hold on tight!
that was a spectacular old house and a horrable waste of beautiful chraftsmanship. those cabinets were especially georgeous and i scincerely hope someone saved them. that filthy delapidated old house was a remnant of better simpler times and a better america. good job getting what you did. remember yesteryear and dont forget ware you came from, god bless you :~)
It's sad to see an old house like that torn apart. Look at the craftsmanship that went into the construction. My dad built houses for awhile back then and workers took great pride in the work they did. Seeing where a wood worker signed the wall !! I may be wrong but I doubt you'll see that under your new plastic, genuine imitation rock fireplace. I grew up in a house like that and it took a 5 pound hammer to put a nail in in the wall to hang a picture.. Old homes like that are all around LA county. It's nice to see one saved if possible but too many are torn apart and all that beautiful wood will be on its way to Mexico and be turned into a new home... nothing like the one it came from, just old scrap wood nailed together. Great pics, enjoyed every minute... thanks. Glad you were able to save some of it.
I’m so glad you saved what you could. I did construction, and new houses are junk, IMHO. I’m seeing people tear down perfectly good 60’s and ‘70s brick houses for condos!
loved seeing the signature of the carpenter from 1921 in there. People took real pride in thier work. i loved that old kitchen sink. Did you notice that te steps were curved , this whole house was probably a classic art nuevo style. its a shame it had to go. well at least you got the radio from it.
I love built-ins like that, but even if the house had been sold, there is a fair chance some new buyer would have found fault with them for some reason and ripped them all out.
No Name, You’re probably right. Some don’t see the craftsmanship with real wood. If a carpenter was to build that today, with real wood, it would cost a fortune...
That's plaster, not drywall. I have a 1941 L.A. house, I got it 10 years ago. I found a few extra 2x4's in the garage. They are very heavy and dense, very different than the lumber available now.
It was probably from old growth trees. But oddly, I had an electrician in replacing the fuse box a few years ago and he said the 2 by 3s in my 1958 condo (it's held up by the brick&block exterior, so most of the studs are small) were destroying his drill bits and saw blades. I doubt they were anything special when new, but I've read that even sapwood hardens as it ages.
No Name - tell your guy to stop shopping at Harbor Freight :) Wood may harden with age but loses mass too. I wish I could keep my violins from cracking.
Jason JJ Cruz I have ever know I should have finished to this day measuring gauge canevari credited that very much babe has Snoop of workers day. I even want to come to smoke I give you a last night at like extra Big Brother Israel
I’m glad where I live, you’re not allowed to tear down a house unless it’s dilapidated beyond repair or completely burnt down, and thankfully that’s only happened a few times
Sometimes i have applied a same sized piece of plastic over the sticker/tube layout chart , and taped it on with masking tape to temporarily allow for cleaning of the cabinet. Works okay as long as you do not leave it wet for a long period of time. Great story about the house and artifacts man!!
Rob K Some star whose name I can't remember is looking to buy the home and restore it to the way it was back during the time The Brady Bunch was filmed and also set up the interior to look exactly like the set from the show did back in the late 60s. It's really a "historical" home, so they should prevent it from being demolished or altered to much.
Old radio repair _and_ urban exploration in a single video. Nice one! BTW, I bet that a rub down with fine grade wet and dry sandpaper followed by a polish with cutting compound would do wonders for the top of that Zenith radio.
it always amazes me what people or companies just destroy and throw away. they'll prob build some stick house that'll get blown over in the next storms, or earthquakes(forgot u live in da zone) . Nice finds, and glad you saved some of that kool old stuff! And a great video as always.
Thank you for saving this radio. I hate to see these old radios get destroyed. And for the condition it was in, you did a very good job of restoring it. People say destroying these things is the best thing to do with these, but I would keep this radio with me, as this radio lasted 60 years! The radios you get from Walmart are cheaply made and will probably have a 10 year lifespan at best. Once again, thank you for saving this radio!
19:36 this song just keeps following me everywhere,I was repairing my sony tc k22 cassette deck,put in some tape laying around pressed play,and hear the exact same guitar solo.
Great horders estate sale in North Hollywood. I thought of you when I saw it today, Lots of vintage Electronics, Nice Black and White Admiral TV So much stuff it's overwhelming. It's open at 8am tomorrow and Monday. Its on a dead end street one block east of Vineland off Oxnard Blvd..
My late grandmothers house was built in 1878 got torn down 2013 bought it in 1997 it had all kinds of signatures from people who had did work throughout the years in closets, and in the transition spaces between additions.
I bet the Zenith engineers never envisioned the kind of crap that would come out of their speakers in the 21st Century. It's not music, that's for sure.
@@pyeltd.5457 Whats really funny here, is no mention of the noise before it that sounded like it was made of mumbling and cartoon sound effects. Drake is levels better, lol
You can remove the Telechron rotor from the clock and heat it on a ~100w light bulb for a moment, then feed it some very light oil around the gear shaft, when the rotor cools down, it should suck the oil in. Repeat this a few times until it has enough oil. This method doesn't save all rotors (some are just too worn or gummed up), but it's worth a try.
Sad to see am old house like this go...and looks like there was nothing wrong with it. That bed construction was something special too! Glad you could save these vintage oil cabinets and some other good stuff. That radio still works fine, you just can't kill a Zenith! Too bad a corner broke off the cabinet, could be repainted otherwise.
Not all houses of that vintage are being torn down everywhere. My maternal grandparent's home in Southwestern Washington State (30 minutes south of Olympia) that was originally built in 1921, is one that is still standing. My grandparents were hardworking folk of modest means, who bought it in 1924; Grandma had it extensively remodeled to a level she could afford in the mid-70s, and they lived there until Grandma passed in 1988, and Grandpa passed in 1989. My late mother and her brothers sold the place in 1991, and in the years since, viewing the property from Google Maps, it's obvious that it has been radically renovated, yet you can still see some original exterior features from its original construction. In recent years, my mother expressed an unfulfilled desire to go back and see her childhood home, as I do now, but I'm not sure how even I would accept seeing it with all the changes. Hard to believe that it has a current estimated value of nearly $300K!
I bet that house was amazing. I would have liked to see the outside of that house and those light fixtures. I believe I have 1 if not 2 of that model without the clock. Not one of the better looking models, but still has nice sound and like your example..they just... work!
When I was a lad, our fathers and mothers used to farm out we children to work on their brothers or sisters farms when we were done on ours. Such chores that needed more body power like working cattle and haying, as well as harvest time we male children were on the move from farm to farm as were our fathers in many cases. One spring, I was sent to my uncles place, he had a large ranch situated in a deep valley between the two grand rivers in South Dakota. The land was very dark black and would gown anything that happened to drop a seed. His ranch land was wide. and open with a large dam in the middle that was well stocked with fish taken by net from the Grand Rivers and transported to the dam in the back of his cattle truck with a stock tank in the bed. We halped with that chore as well. I loved being on their place despite the nasty habit of the prairie rattle snakes of showing up in their yard and about the farm buildings as well as out in the pastures and around the large damn. Mom's sister was the wife of this uncle, and she was a very cool lady. They had 3 kids, one the eldest was a couple months younger then I the rest were abut ten years apart, the youngest at that time was a babe in arms. My aunt knew I was smoking, a secret from my parents, I thought, so when I arrived she took me aside in the kitchen and told me that she didn't want me helping my self to her cigarettes as both she and her giant of a husband smoked steadily. So she gave me a pack of PellMell's unfiltered every morning with breakfast and I made that last all day. Well I worked my young ass off that particular spring as we got the seeds planted in the fields, worked the young calves castrating the males and dehorning the lot as well as vaccinating them lot for various deseases as required by the State so when I was packing up to go home that summer she brought me a nice tube radio set that they had used in the bedroom but recently replaced it with a more modern clock radio, and I took it home. Best damn radio I have ever owned and I had it up till I got married and moved to a neighboring State seeking work. It was a Zenith as well, it was the only radio I never took apart or screwed with because it always worked and I loved the warm sound of a tube set with quality components and speaker. Ah sadly my aunt and uncle have left this cruel world many moons ago, their kids, well 2 of their kids are still alive, the youngest took his own life after loosing the only job he ever had some 40 years from the day he got it thanks to a new owner who "just didn't like the guy!" We live in a right to works state so my cousin was without any options and I guess he had enough. I miss him, he was a cool kid, in fact all their kids were cool even though a bit on the wild side. The one that is my age is still around but I rarely ever see him, his wife comes by from time to time, she grew up with us and was my friend before she wed him, they lost a son in an drug deal gone wrong, he was the first murdered in our small village by a drug dealers wife using an AR-15. I attended the funeral, it was a very sad day indeed. Life goes on, and it appears that so do I. Sorry for rambling.
This reminds me of my grandfathers house in El Segundo back in the day. I think it was on Sepulveda back in the 70's. It was sort of a mission style I guess. With a separate concrete pool (12 feet on the deep end) and a detached 2 car garage with a guest house above. He was modest middle class, but owned a couple of machine shops.
29:44 Should'a grabbed the dovetail router guide. 29:55 Air compressor & tank. Router table. 29:57 Table saw, radial arm saw. The day may come when you want to restore cabinets. You can probably get good money for the oil dispensers. People who restore old cars frequently like to have accoutrements in their showplace garages.
Nice save on those items, neat Zenith too. You were right, came right back to life. Just a waste tearing that old house down. No OSB, Chinese drywall, or PVC in the 1920's...
My experience with seleniums (as they were prevalent in Polish radios/TVs, I very rarely seen rectifier tubes) is that they fail short, for enough time that whole room stinks for another week, then yes, they become open. There was a big problem with some Russian TVs where selenium rectifier started to fry and ignited flammable board material, you can imagine the rest;)
I'll bet the silicon diode would stop that process, since it limits the voltage across the rectifier (at least in the forward direction) to .7 V. On the other hand, that puts more stress on the other parts of the circuit, which is usually designed for the voltage drop from the rectifier. Some sources recommend putting a resistor in series with the diode to replicate the drop of the selenium rectifier.
Unreal how they could just trash all of that. I helped demolish an old house once but we saved everything in it that could be saved and used somewhere else clear down to the frame. I spent weeks pulling nails from old studs and joists after school with a crowbar and a hammer.
Interesting segment.Autosol might bring up the cabinet and the bandspread cover.Internally the radio is quite good! Pity they had to knock down an old house.Thanks.
I have often wondered if there would be any improvement in the quality of the sound if one were to replace that half rectification with full rectification? IE buid the 4 diode rectifier in place of the single diode. Just curious, it would seem that the smoother the DC the better the thing should sound.
Could perhaps preserve the sticker by gently cleaning it (by dry brush or slightly damp cloth) and giving it a clear conformal coating of epoxy or polyurethane (by spray or brush) prior to washing the rest of the case. Works pretty good despite what it's been through! I like the metal speaker mesh, I have a portable solid-state radio I found in a wrecking yard that has metal mesh. Took it home, added batteries, and it worked just fine! It's currently taken apart for eventual restoration as the casing was/is in rough condition. Thanks for documenting that cool old house! Pity it wasn't put on a historic register and protected, or at the very least more thoroughly salvaged! Plenty of stuff that could've been sold or used to restore other similar era buildings. Glad you saved what you did! Was the lone tube any good? Wow! Venting propane like that can't be legal! (not that they care, I'm sure) Was there nothing of interest in those wooden cases in the garage? Those bulk oil tanks are awesome!
Sad to see a beautiful house like that destroyed 😔 I've got a Forrest green version of that radio that works great! The amount of radium they used in those clock hands specifically are the highest I've ever seen! My Geiger counter screams if I put it anywhere close to it xD Getting the clock to move is actually pretty fast and easy, you've just gotta pop out the motor unit (it's just wedged in without any screws or anything) and heat up the back with a heat gun until the old oil bubbles out around the drive gear. Wipe it away and then drop some 3-in-1 oil around the gear while it's still hot and as it cools it'll suck it in. Should work after that
I have a Zenith high-fidelity table-top from the previous year. It has a few audio issues but otherwise works nicely. It has an electrostatic tweeter in it.
I'm a fairly new viewer that was drawn in by your comedic relief. To hear you mention it is very interesting. There are many dolts in this world that your humor sails right over their heads. I often wonder (speaking of myself) if my humor is that obscure, that clever or just too stupid for people to understand. Oh well. Please keep doing what you do.
You can easily tell that house has been there for quite some time, since that newer apartment or condo complex is literally right behind the house. And to think that this beautiful American made house is being torn down for the ugly house that will be built there with the cheapest Chinese materials available is absolutely disgraceful.
So much history lost, thank you Shango for saving this small piece of it!
That was so sad to see that lovely old house been demolished, such a waste!
right, they wrecked that cool house to build condos, and most people cant afford living in those tall monsters.
xSlayerz Yes - So true too. They pay a fortune for them with little to no backyards or a enough room to swing a cat either.
@@ticn you don't know what eventually moved in there... very common in my area to build condos and make them section 8...
Destroying houses that beautiful in design should be a crime. so sad....
If it was loaded with Asbestos, maybe the buyer just wanted to start again for safety
Lets NOT Play With Electricity
If a home is "historical" and able to be restored in a reasonable manner it should be the law that it must be done that way.
S James asbestos is great xx just don't disturb it.
I hate to see that happen. There's a Gausthaus that was knocked down that was beautiful traditionally built, the owner sold it to a construction company after his brother died and he said he couldn't continue ro run the Gausthaus. Everyone knew the place at the corner, it was very recognizable. Its sad his brother died and it was sold to a construction company who decided to further "modernize" the area around Milwaukee with more new ugly buildings, yay! They are putting a Starbucks and Panda Express at least, I wouldnt go to either one. Everything seems to be getting replaced or remodeled, some for no good reson directly
watershed44 I think thats a great idea, my grandmother thought it already was like that in some way but I guess theres a lot of things that organizations cant do, theres too many buildings and structures and the law allows this duscusting act of desruction so it would be hard for them to do something about it. It should be the law to keep these buildings
Sad to see a old house go down. In my town, you can drive to any newer part and see a row of houses and they all look the same. Some are really close to each other, almost wouldn't be any different than an apartment. Then you can drive to the older parts of town and see immaculate old houses built from the late 1890's to early 1900's and all in really nice shape as their owners realize what they've got. Plus, no two are alike either, they each have a special style all their own. Fun video!
It's always cool when a discovered old electronic item has an interesting story behind it! Saved from the bulldozer at the last moment!
I have been finding a lot stuff with rubbing voice coils and damaged speakers. BandersenTV uses Anne's Crazy Glue in the brown bottle from JoAnne fabrics, mostly due to being water soluble and able to be revised and repaired further later. Maybe water soluble Elmer's glue would work too. I used to use contact cement, but you basically need organic solvent if you are going to revise it. I use cotton balls and string to try to brace a speaker with a badly rubbing voice coil. A trick I learned out of the back of an old radio I found. I do love to get them running on as much original equipment as possible.
Sick at heart to see all the beautiful hand work in the house destroyed.
Those "Veedol" oil containers are incredibly rare. Likely pre WW2.
Definitely. J Ballew... That was a great score getting those, Shango066. :-).
Veedol is still around just GOOGLE for it.
Veedol was part of Tidewater Oil, which owned Flying A stations. My father worked at a Flying A as supplemental income in the 1960s when he first started at Boeing. Nowadays you'd have to have corporate HR approve the moonlighting. They would probably say no after doing a detailed conflict of interest review.
Not the same "Veedol", David. You're thinking of the "ASA Veedol" / Veedol Int.Ltd, which is not the same company.
"Old" Veedol got bought up by B-P in the 50's.
So, while not the same as a Zombie brand, it's not the same company.
At best the connection between the two is very loose.
.
20w oil was used in ford modal a and t s. the oil is detergent oil heavy duty witch has zddp. it is probably from 40s as detergent oil was developed for military. still old. to bad all that cool old stuff is gone. so sad. I do not no how you do not get freaked out from all the dust and debris in old buildings as the old plater has asbestos and led in it. well keep up the good work.
My house was built in 1926, Dutch Colonial (it actually looks like the house in the late 70's Amityville Horror movie except mine is 2 1/2 story as opposed to a full three story) I love these old houses. Although mine has a few drawbacks I suppose, no ceiling lights in the living room, floor lamps are the solution in my case. Also no framed exterior walls, just two layers of brick (the exterior is standard brick and the inner layer of brick is the old I think 6x6 clay brick) with plaster applied over the inner layer for the interior finish not too much insulation factor there, lol. Nine foot ceilings, mahogany staircase and oak floors. Also it just dawned on me what this channel reminds me of! It is the Roadkill of old electronics!! LOL. Great save!!
That's a really cool radio. The story behind it is even better. I laughed really hard about that spray magic. That old house was amazing. You won't ever get craftsmanship like that again.
That is the home of a man who was a perfectionist and did EVERYTHING himself.
Hi there, and welcome to Mr. Shango's lab! Today we are going to be plugging in a rat feces infested tube radio, and seeing if it catches fire.... If you're following along, remember you're doing so at your own risk. Just take care...
If you were doing a Mr. Carlson impression, it's Hi _Everyone_ , and welcome to _another episode of_
Enjoy your videos Shango. Always entertaining and informative
Lots of nostalgia there! Veedol motor oil was the private label brand for Flying A gas stations. The last time I saw a Flying A product was the battery in my first car, a '65 Plymouth, It lasted all nine years I had the car. Great video, every time I see an old Zenith product come to life I get a lump in my throat. A great American company killed by cheap foreign crap.
You are correct sir.
We need to limit free trade in order to protect capitalism! /s
I'm so glad you & your friends got what you could. Thanks for the vid.
Glad you saved this old radio and it sounds great!!
I have the same Zenith model. The clock just died on mine and the speaker rattles after it's been on awhile. Thanks for the tip on how to fix the speaker. My Zenith picks up KNX 1070 at night here in Sacramento.
Thank you for videoing that old house. Buildings from that era should be preserved like vintage cars. So sad.
Your channel is awesome! 👍
Great rescues. They are tearing down old (100+ year old) houses left and right around where I live (suburb of St.Paul MN). They've been donating many of the old houses to the fire department for practice burns. A few years ago they burnt down a brick 1906 house at the end of my block, and then within a year or two, they burnt down an 1850s all brick farm house with original outbuildings (not common in this area anymore). In the years before that I can recall seeing or hearing about several other old houses. These houses were not abandoned or in great disrepair. Mind you this area was heavily developed between the 1950s to 1980s, so most of the houses around here date between those years. They have since crammed multifamily homes onto the lots those old houses stood.
I'll bet the buildings that replaced those houses would have provided much more exciting "practice burns". With sprinkler requirements, some fireproofing codes that would otherwise apply are waived and with all the light trusses in attics these days, many modern buildings are one spark away from becoming a bonfire. They will become death traps when they age and their sprinkler systems start to fail.
The quality goes in before the name goes on ....
Z E N I T H
That was indeed a lovely home. Much attention to detail and craftsmanship
You know your old when you find a Madonna song on Oldies station.
Isn't Madonna approaching 60 now, how time flies. I remember her videos on MTV (remember that) when she was very young looking. She came out with all the music videos I liked and saved them all on my Betamax...
When I was a kid, in the early 80's Oldies were songs from the late 60's and early 70's and back... so originally they used that to mean songs that were only like 15 years old! I'll bet there's a name for that 'effect' but yeah it always bugs me out too. By that same standard a song from Demi Lovato would be an Oldie now. A Lady Gaga song would be an Oldie.
Back then though, I guess Rock and Roll had only been around 25 years, so something 15 years old was an Oldie. Funny how time flies! Hold on tight!
Can't wait for the particleboard 10 year guarantee shitheap that will replace this fine old home.
10 year is too modest more like 3 and a half, it will have termites after 2
MS-DOS4 that is so true
That's probably the coolest bed I've seen lol
that was a spectacular old house and a horrable waste of beautiful chraftsmanship. those cabinets were especially georgeous and i scincerely hope someone saved them. that filthy delapidated old house was a remnant of better simpler times and a better america. good job getting what you did. remember yesteryear and dont forget ware you came from, god bless you :~)
Back in the good old days when a 2x4 was actually a 2x4....
It's sad to see an old house like that torn apart. Look at the craftsmanship that went into the construction. My dad built houses for awhile back then and workers took great pride in the work they did. Seeing where a wood worker signed the wall !! I may be wrong but I doubt you'll see that under your new plastic, genuine imitation rock fireplace. I grew up in a house like that and it took a 5 pound hammer to put a nail in in the wall to hang a picture.. Old homes like that are all around LA county. It's nice to see one saved if possible but too many are torn apart and all that beautiful wood will be on its way to Mexico and be turned into a new home... nothing like the one it came from, just old scrap wood nailed together. Great pics, enjoyed every minute... thanks. Glad you were able to save some of it.
I’m so glad you saved what you could. I did construction, and new houses are junk, IMHO. I’m seeing people tear down perfectly good 60’s and ‘70s brick houses for condos!
haha...I love that you used latex gloves through the entire video until the part where you're using a mystery cleaner. :D
lmao XD
The Guitologist , probably would eat right through the latex lol
I admire that you love history so much. most people just toss anything older then 4 years in the trash.
loved seeing the signature of the carpenter from 1921 in there. People took real pride in thier work. i loved that old kitchen sink. Did you notice that te steps were curved , this whole house was probably a classic art nuevo style. its a shame it had to go. well at least you got the radio from it.
Nice old Zenith radio. I guess they were the top of the line back then.
Makes me sick to my stomach that the cabinets got destroyed...
I love built-ins like that, but even if the house had been sold, there is a fair chance some new buyer would have found fault with them for some reason and ripped them all out.
No Name, You’re probably right. Some don’t see the craftsmanship with real wood. If a carpenter was to
build that today, with real wood, it would cost a fortune...
People shouldnt touch things like that, its not necessary
just finished work, cup of tea ready & this is the 1st vid in my feed. happy monday!
That's plaster, not drywall.
I have a 1941 L.A. house, I got it 10 years ago. I found a few extra 2x4's in the garage. They are very heavy and dense, very different than the lumber available now.
Yes Cedar wood lath and plaster. Always has a beautiful character handmade
It was probably from old growth trees. But oddly, I had an electrician in replacing the fuse box a few years ago and he said the 2 by 3s in my 1958 condo (it's held up by the brick&block exterior, so most of the studs are small) were destroying his drill bits and saw blades. I doubt they were anything special when new, but I've read that even sapwood hardens as it ages.
No Name - tell your guy to stop shopping at Harbor Freight :) Wood may harden with age but loses mass too. I wish I could keep my violins from cracking.
Always cool to see those old Zenith clock radios. Never seen one like that one.
Hello Shango love your video's your work I'm here keeping it real I never left I enjoy the restoration of TV's radios the min video cool
Jason JJ Cruz I have ever know I should have finished to this day measuring gauge canevari credited that very much babe has Snoop of workers day. I even want to come to smoke I give you a last night at like extra Big Brother Israel
shango066; Exactly, well said.
That’s an absolute shame that house was lost. I LOVE the old woodwork. Hurts to watch that explanation of it being torn down.
I’m glad where I live, you’re not allowed to tear down a house unless it’s dilapidated beyond repair or completely burnt down, and thankfully that’s only happened a few times
Sometimes i have applied a same sized piece of plastic over the sticker/tube layout chart , and taped it on with masking tape to temporarily allow for cleaning of the cabinet. Works okay as long as you do not leave it wet for a long period of time. Great story about the house and artifacts man!!
Wonderful fined, thank you for sharing even though it made me sick... beautiful craftsmanship
Another old relic demolished to build condos. I couldn’t watch the end.
The Brady Bunch house may meet a similar fate soon.
Rob K yeah. Sucks and they'll charge 3,500 for rent or what ever. Sad.
brady bunch house is apparently up for sale for 1.2, i think, but yeh mabye it mite go cos it is only a two bedroom
Rob K
Some star whose name I can't remember is looking to buy the home and restore it to the way it was back during the time The Brady Bunch was filmed
and also set up the interior to look exactly like the set from the show did back in the late 60s. It's really a "historical" home, so they should prevent it from being demolished or altered to much.
watershed44 HGTV is restoring the home room by room right now, using the original surviving cast kids from the Brady Bunch
Old radio repair _and_ urban exploration in a single video. Nice one!
BTW, I bet that a rub down with fine grade wet and dry sandpaper followed by a polish with cutting compound would do wonders for the top of that Zenith radio.
I was waiting for a. New repair video tank you to sharing. Me. This video. I subcribe to you i. Love. You repair video
Those enlargers bring back memories! I was so very much into that stuff, but couldn't afford most of the good equipment.
it always amazes me what people or companies just destroy and throw away. they'll prob build some stick house that'll get blown over in the next storms, or earthquakes(forgot u live in da zone) . Nice finds, and glad you saved some of that kool old stuff! And a great video as always.
Haha Mr. Shango's lab. Cleaning toilets with cola and screwdrivers, and spraying radios in the bathtub.
mikedrz - Yes that’s how our Mr Shango rolls.
Corinna T Roberts76 Yeah he's got a very different persona from Mr Carlson haha
mikedrz - So true.
Thank you for saving this radio. I hate to see these old radios get destroyed. And for the condition it was in, you did a very good job of restoring it. People say destroying these things is the best thing to do with these, but I would keep this radio with me, as this radio lasted 60 years! The radios you get from Walmart are cheaply made and will probably have a 10 year lifespan at best. Once again, thank you for saving this radio!
That horrendous "music" being received by the old Zenith @ 7:27 just seems downright disrespectful to it. Oy.
Been through a lot and turns right on, Zenith! The quality goes in before the name goes on.
Totally amazing! Thanks to your efforts shango66, this Zenith Radio will live on for another 50 Years!
19:36 this song just keeps following me everywhere,I was repairing my sony tc k22 cassette deck,put in some tape laying around pressed play,and hear the exact same guitar solo.
Motor 70001 house of the rising sun!
Fantastic. Thanks for posting this
I'm glad you saved those old pumps. I would have pulled those stairway supports just to save that beautiful old wood.
That radio work's well for its age ,job well done
Great horders estate sale in North Hollywood. I thought of you when I saw it today, Lots of vintage Electronics, Nice Black and White Admiral TV So much stuff it's overwhelming. It's open at 8am tomorrow and Monday. Its on a dead end street one block east of Vineland off Oxnard Blvd..
Sad about the old home being demolished. Too bad nobody could have bought it and moved it to another location. They don't make them that way anymore.
My late grandmothers house was built in 1878 got torn down 2013 bought it in 1997 it had all kinds of signatures from people who had did work throughout the years in closets, and in the transition spaces between additions.
Very interesting video. Although Interesting, the house was sad. Thanks for filming.
first time i see you cleaning something. Nice!
We lost a couple 100 year old movie theatres in my city thanks to progress. We documented everything we could but its a real shame to see them fall.
Sad video...thanks for sharing the resurrection with us though!
I bet the Zenith engineers never envisioned the kind of crap that would come out of their speakers in the 21st Century. It's not music, that's for sure.
Sure sounds like music. Don't matter if it is your taste or not. Drake vs Frank Sinatra.
Don’t sound like such an old woman!! That’s how the world works
@@pyeltd.5457 Whats really funny here, is no mention of the noise before it that sounded like it was made of mumbling and cartoon sound effects. Drake is levels better, lol
Cool house with cool stuff in, damn shame it got demolished :(
You can remove the Telechron rotor from the clock and heat it on a ~100w light bulb for a moment, then feed it some very light oil around the gear shaft, when the rotor cools down, it should suck the oil in. Repeat this a few times until it has enough oil. This method doesn't save all rotors (some are just too worn or gummed up), but it's worth a try.
I've hit them with a blowtorch to open them up and saved every single one I've dealt with
Sad to see am old house like this go...and looks like there was nothing wrong with it. That bed construction was something special too! Glad you could save these vintage oil cabinets and some other good stuff. That radio still works fine, you just can't kill a Zenith! Too bad a corner broke off the cabinet, could be repainted otherwise.
I like the stairs and those cabinets
this video just gave me a great idea on how to not get the tube schematic wet while washing the radio (-:
Not all houses of that vintage are being torn down everywhere. My maternal grandparent's home in Southwestern Washington State (30 minutes south of Olympia) that was originally built in 1921, is one that is still standing. My grandparents were hardworking folk of modest means, who bought it in 1924; Grandma had it extensively remodeled to a level she could afford in the mid-70s, and they lived there until Grandma passed in 1988, and Grandpa passed in 1989. My late mother and her brothers sold the place in 1991, and in the years since, viewing the property from Google Maps, it's obvious that it has been radically renovated, yet you can still see some original exterior features from its original construction. In recent years, my mother expressed an unfulfilled desire to go back and see her childhood home, as I do now, but I'm not sure how even I would accept seeing it with all the changes. Hard to believe that it has a current estimated value of nearly $300K!
Zenith man, they really are something else
I bet that house was amazing. I would have liked to see the outside of that house and those light fixtures. I believe I have 1 if not 2 of that model without the clock. Not one of the better looking models, but still has nice sound and like your example..they just... work!
When I was a lad, our fathers and mothers used to farm out we children to work on their brothers or sisters farms when we were done on ours. Such chores that needed more body power like working cattle and haying, as well as harvest time we male children were on the move from farm to farm as were our fathers in many cases. One spring, I was sent to my uncles place, he had a large ranch situated in a deep valley between the two grand rivers in South Dakota. The land was very dark black and would gown anything that happened to drop a seed. His ranch land was wide. and open with a large dam in the middle that was well stocked with fish taken by net from the Grand Rivers and transported to the dam in the back of his cattle truck with a stock tank in the bed. We halped with that chore as well. I loved being on their place despite the nasty habit of the prairie rattle snakes of showing up in their yard and about the farm buildings as well as out in the pastures and around the large damn. Mom's sister was the wife of this uncle, and she was a very cool lady. They had 3 kids, one the eldest was a couple months younger then I the rest were abut ten years apart, the youngest at that time was a babe in arms. My aunt knew I was smoking, a secret from my parents, I thought, so when I arrived she took me aside in the kitchen and told me that she didn't want me helping my self to her cigarettes as both she and her giant of a husband smoked steadily. So she gave me a pack of PellMell's unfiltered every morning with breakfast and I made that last all day. Well I worked my young ass off that particular spring as we got the seeds planted in the fields, worked the young calves castrating the males and dehorning the lot as well as vaccinating them lot for various deseases as required by the State so when I was packing up to go home that summer she brought me a nice tube radio set that they had used in the bedroom but recently replaced it with a more modern clock radio, and I took it home. Best damn radio I have ever owned and I had it up till I got married and moved to a neighboring State seeking work. It was a Zenith as well, it was the only radio I never took apart or screwed with because it always worked and I loved the warm sound of a tube set with quality components and speaker. Ah sadly my aunt and uncle have left this cruel world many moons ago, their kids, well 2 of their kids are still alive, the youngest took his own life after loosing the only job he ever had some 40 years from the day he got it thanks to a new owner who "just didn't like the guy!" We live in a right to works state so my cousin was without any options and I guess he had enough. I miss him, he was a cool kid, in fact all their kids were cool even though a bit on the wild side. The one that is my age is still around but I rarely ever see him, his wife comes by from time to time, she grew up with us and was my friend before she wed him, they lost a son in an drug deal gone wrong, he was the first murdered in our small village by a drug dealers wife using an AR-15. I attended the funeral, it was a very sad day indeed. Life goes on, and it appears that so do I. Sorry for rambling.
Radium dial... and it cleaned up very nice!
Mr Shango's Lab .. what shenannagins are afoot now?
This reminds me of my grandfathers house in El Segundo back in the day. I think it was on Sepulveda back in the 70's. It was sort of a mission style I guess. With a separate concrete pool (12 feet on the deep end) and a detached 2 car garage with a guest house above. He was modest middle class, but owned a couple of machine shops.
This kept coming up on my recommendations I just had to watch it
29:44 Should'a grabbed the dovetail router guide. 29:55 Air compressor & tank. Router table. 29:57 Table saw, radial arm saw. The day may come when you want to restore cabinets. You can probably get good money for the oil dispensers. People who restore old cars frequently like to have accoutrements in their showplace garages.
I did, we got all the big stuff
Nice save on those items, neat Zenith too. You were right, came right back to life.
Just a waste tearing that old house down. No OSB, Chinese drywall, or PVC in the 1920's...
My experience with seleniums (as they were prevalent in Polish radios/TVs, I very rarely seen rectifier tubes) is that they fail short, for enough time that whole room stinks for another week, then yes, they become open. There was a big problem with some Russian TVs where selenium rectifier started to fry and ignited flammable board material, you can imagine the rest;)
I'll bet the silicon diode would stop that process, since it limits the voltage across the rectifier (at least in the forward direction) to .7 V. On the other hand, that puts more stress on the other parts of the circuit, which is usually designed for the voltage drop from the rectifier. Some sources recommend putting a resistor in series with the diode to replicate the drop of the selenium rectifier.
My grandfather drove over 1,000,000 miles in his Tucker using high Zinc Veedoo-Real talk!!
Beautiful thank you kiss Brazil 🤗👏👏👏👏👏
Love to give that radio a good home love that radio
that hide under the stares wood work is beautiful wood work. I would begs to get that. Timeless wood work done by some unknown carpenter
Unreal how they could just trash all of that. I helped demolish an old house once but we saved everything in it that could be saved and used somewhere else clear down to the frame. I spent weeks pulling nails from old studs and joists after school with a crowbar and a hammer.
My hair stood up @ 28:32, when the bucket took out those tanks of refrigerant....
AMStationEngineer you were not the only one..
Ah, +GrayWolf, I guess that means I've attained some semblance of normalcy;-)
Interesting segment.Autosol might bring up the cabinet and the bandspread cover.Internally the radio is quite good! Pity they had to knock down an old house.Thanks.
Too bad the oldies station wasn’t playing Smoke on the water. Great job as always man!
lol ... Mr Shango's lab!
How many whacks do you think a modern bathtub could take?
I have often wondered if there would be any improvement in the quality of the sound if one were to replace that half rectification with full rectification? IE buid the 4 diode rectifier in place of the single diode. Just curious, it would seem that the smoother the DC the better the thing should sound.
Glad I was able to save the darkroom equipment
I like your videos!
Pretty cool stereo effect on the distorted speaker @14:16!
Could perhaps preserve the sticker by gently cleaning it (by dry brush or slightly damp cloth) and giving it a clear conformal coating of epoxy or polyurethane (by spray or brush) prior to washing the rest of the case. Works pretty good despite what it's been through! I like the metal speaker mesh, I have a portable solid-state radio I found in a wrecking yard that has metal mesh. Took it home, added batteries, and it worked just fine! It's currently taken apart for eventual restoration as the casing was/is in rough condition. Thanks for documenting that cool old house! Pity it wasn't put on a historic register and protected, or at the very least more thoroughly salvaged! Plenty of stuff that could've been sold or used to restore other similar era buildings. Glad you saved what you did! Was the lone tube any good? Wow! Venting propane like that can't be legal! (not that they care, I'm sure) Was there nothing of interest in those wooden cases in the garage? Those bulk oil tanks are awesome!
Sad to see a beautiful house like that destroyed 😔
I've got a Forrest green version of that radio that works great! The amount of radium they used in those clock hands specifically are the highest I've ever seen! My Geiger counter screams if I put it anywhere close to it xD
Getting the clock to move is actually pretty fast and easy, you've just gotta pop out the motor unit (it's just wedged in without any screws or anything) and heat up the back with a heat gun until the old oil bubbles out around the drive gear. Wipe it away and then drop some 3-in-1 oil around the gear while it's still hot and as it cools it'll suck it in. Should work after that
That hat in the thumbnail picture is really blinging and I mean hard !! I hope you kept that 🤞
I have a Zenith high-fidelity table-top from the previous year. It has a few audio issues but otherwise works nicely. It has an electrostatic tweeter in it.
What a shame. All that lovely gear and house bulldozed! Thankfully people like us fight to keep this stuff going in a throw away society.
Hope you still have it
kind of ironic that the radio coming from the house being torn down plays The House Of The Rising Sun at 19:37
I'm a fairly new viewer that was drawn in by your comedic relief. To hear you mention it is very interesting. There are many dolts in this world that your humor sails right over their heads. I often wonder (speaking of myself) if my humor is that obscure, that clever or just too stupid for people to understand. Oh well. Please keep doing what you do.
You can easily tell that house has been there for quite some time, since that newer apartment or condo complex is literally right behind the house. And to think that this beautiful American made house is being torn down for the ugly house that will be built there with the cheapest Chinese materials available is absolutely disgraceful.
Archie Bunker oh yes in Australia they use Chinese Asbestos
Spanish made in America as the Spanish settled there.
Mr shango’s lab hahaha love it