At 22:00 you more or les gave up on it for obvious reasons. Then I looked at the remaining time on the video and then I knew that you would get it to work again, and you did!! Thank you for the upload!
You always amaze me! Thanks. Like entering the twilight zone. At first the voltages are bad, later okay! Your reasoning of why the voltages are off by following the flow, you mentioned it at least twice really helps us visualize the operation of the circuit. Keep em coming!
We have the gradma's singer sewing machine in excellent condition that bought in 1934 along with its payment bills.And thought that might get value as a vintage machine until i found that ebay sells brand new replacement parts because there are million machines outhere.Also the same and even worst with my Amstrad CPC464,so the vintaging occupation is not my lucky area.
My grandmother had one of these next to her bed. It was in prestine condition. I used to listen to it at night when I couldnt sleep when I stayed at my Grand parents. I think it was 60's anyways. I was actually sad to see it in such poor shape. Hers was not the greatest but it worked. I think they made several types. I wasnt far off on the date. My grandmother always took really great care of her stuff.
I really enjoy getting all the technical specifications and explanations in the diagnosis. Top notch repair done right, not just slapping a bunch of new caps on a board and calling it good.
There used to be a deal that someone would bring me a broken computer, typewriter or even radio. I would tinker with them a bit and usually they would start working. I usually never knew what the hell fixed them, and it soon became known as the "Chief's Effect" (I was a police chief for 10 years.) Those days are now long gone, once in a great while someone will recall my unusual gift and bring me an injured or ill device, and if they ask nicely I will tinker with them, usually with the same effect.
I did seen one capacitor that was broken from the solder joint in this video where you started checking other capacitors. All and all, great video! Thank you for sharing!
Thank you Shango. I for one, appreciate your resurrection videos. Makes me think about people restoring things after the great apocalypse or something for survival.
I love the videos where you change your mined. You are so adamant about not worth fixing, than the next frame you change your mined. Keep the videos coming.
Great video! In the beginning all that thing picked up was the Mourning Dove channel but you got it to pick up two news stations in two languages at once plus the super cheesy Karaoke network. Pretty neat radio, it actually sounds much better than I thought it would. Sony, ever the innovator!
As said, tin whiskers I reckon. The heat from the iron has probably cleared them, temporarily of course. Often tapping them will cause the fault to manifest itself. Really really common on the AF11x series seen on a lot of 60's UK sets
A large obstacle to the repair of these radios is a Board made of foil getinax. Thin tracks of copper foil fly off after the first re-soldering. Yesterday repaired a similar radio , now tracks have to be glued with cyanoacrylate. Laughed at the domestic germanium transistor MP 42 (as he there fell ?! heh ) like for video.
40:22 It may be kereoke but anything beats Shana Easton's screechy voice. Sony went all out with that thing: nice dial, almost-normal-sized AF transformers and a really beefy speaker for such a set. Even with two stations coming in at once, I can tell it sounded pretty good. Those AM/FM clock radios Sony was selling in the mid 1960s, the ones with the "deluxe" walnut case that looked a little home-made didn't sound nearly as good.
So cool. I like bringing almost completely dead looking radios back to life. I also find that newly made alleged transistor substitutes (particularly germanium) do not work as well as the originals. For one Zenith 500 hand wired I had I had to hunt down and buy NOS transistors and hand pick the ones that worked best int he RF/IF stages. Good work!
I have got away with using pnp 2n2906 in place of AF117 in some applications. Perhaps 2N2904 could work for those, though the bias might need adjusting.
Several companies made these back in the late 50s and early 60s. A friend of mine had a channel master, that was like this. Pretty decent radio in fairly sensitive, I restored it for her and it was a fun project
This was so much FUN! thanks now for an 'Adult Cocktail'. ; ] Glad to see Organ Donation put on hold for a Swing with Frankenstein, err ~ Two Timin' Jammin'.
I had one of these a while back. Cute radio, didn't work very well. Probably had dried out Japanese electrolytics in it but I never bothered to change them. Nice reverse painted dial though.
I don't know...... That's actually quite an appealing "rat look, steampunk workshop radio"! Without word of a lie, we once had a radio in similar condition (late '70s into early '80s). We never changed the station, never turned it off by switch - Just plugged it in in the morning, and unplugged it in the evening. It ran for years in that condition and never missed a beat. "Old Fido" we called it....
Those old ass germanium transistor's will do exactly what you experienced, they check bad but yet still work, the missing 2.8 vdc came back after you removed the first one, I bet throwing the heat from the iron on it caused it to start conducting again. Great job as always!
I remember you restored a console radio and had LA Oldies disco Saturday night on and played that disco song that seemed to never end. The Google song finder couldn't identify the song even though the song was playing clearly on that vintage radio. However, it was able to identify the song on this radio despite it being all garbly googly.
Excellent video. This is reality, indeed. 36:00 in and look at all the bad solder joints on that board! And the cracked caps on the top of the board, bad transistors... I am surprised this thing words at all. Geez.
You're like a modern-day version of an electronic Frankenstein, Shango066, LOL! Bringing dead electronic corpses from the dead. I can almost hear those circuits weakly whispering: "Who disturbs our peace?".
There's a really interesting documentary about the history of the Japanese semiconductor industry, and I remember it mentioning there was an event when transistors in radios started failing en masse sometime in the 1950's. This is probably not the case here but it's still a worthy watch.
heat from desoldering will temporarly open the internal shorts "Blow out" but it does not last. They need to be replaced with original parts or silicon with some conversion or the whole unit scrapped. The radios in it's physical condition is not worth full restoration and would be best used for parts to bring another radio back to life..
Hey buddy thank you for the video. In your experience what is or are the most sensitive am radios? Is it really the Panasonic rf-2200? I hope you can help,”. Thanks, Joe in CT
Vanguard made a very similar radio here in Spain from the 60s all the way through the 70s till they went out of business in 1981.The Vanguard Atlas. They came in different colors, some are AM/FM, AM/SW or AM/FM/SW. 1961 model: www.radiomuseum.org/r/vanguard_atlas_5_pt_s65pts.html?language_id=5 1977 model: www.radiomuseum.org/r/vanguard_super_atlas_fm80ptfm_80_p.html
Now I have only been tinkering with AM raidos since around 1958 when my dad let me begin servicing the old battery pack tube set that we used for our only source of entertainment on our farmstead up in rural North Dakota, where the electrical service failed to come to our place. It has been my experience that when you replace a leaky cap that has failed, you must remove it from the circuit because it places resistance in the circuit, and also allows DC voltage to leak across the leads messing up the balance of the entire set. Just a thought, this could be the problem, or part of it at any rate. Also if you salvage caps from old boards, you should use a leakage detector to see if they leak DC. A cap can check great but still leak DC, and if so can mess with your circuit as well as, in some cases put AC to the entire set and make it a bit dangerous with AC units.
So most of this older transistor stuff up thru the mid-60's or so has germanium transistors, which could be expensive or even un-obtainable. Especially if the application is higher power like an audio amp. So is it practical to consider re-biasing the given circuit sections for Silicon Transistors over Germanium to return it to functionality? From what I've read is that if the battery voltage is too low it may not work given the higher base-emitter voltage of 0.2V to 0.6V of Silicon. Just looking of an opinion.
I wonder if you could swap the polarity of the Electrolytic Capacitors and the Battery round and then use PNP Germanium Transistors instead?It would just mean your voltages were negative instead of positive wouldn't it?
One of my favorite Shango066 videos. Took me a year to find my own TR-712, in great shape and with the blue/gray cabinet. Can't wait to get it!
Is so nice to see these devices working at least one last time...
My parents had one of those for years in the kitchen.. was always on around supper playing CBC. Recognized it right away from your thumbnail. :D
At 22:00 you more or les gave up on it for obvious reasons. Then I looked at the remaining time on the video and then I knew that you would get it to work again, and you did!! Thank you for the upload!
You brought it back to life ! Now is time to 3D print that case to have a full restoration and be proud of yourself. :)
Shango doesn't do restorations. Leave that to someone else - like on _Phil's Old Radios_ site.
When installed MP 37 I thought I would hear the voice of Brezhnev
You really really like saying the word “baked!”
In one video, he mentioned a TV being 'extra crisp'.
The reason we keep coming back is because you gave up 20 minutes in but the videos 50 minutes long you are the man man
You always amaze me! Thanks. Like entering the twilight zone. At first the voltages are bad, later okay! Your reasoning of why the voltages are off by following the flow, you mentioned it at least twice really helps us visualize the operation of the circuit. Keep em coming!
$1000 Rare Sony Radio. Working in Excellent condition. You got it man. Ebay here we come.
"Organically distressed original design"
We have the gradma's singer sewing machine in excellent condition that bought in 1934 along with its payment bills.And thought that might get value as a vintage machine until i found that ebay sells brand new replacement parts because there are million machines outhere.Also the same and even worst with my Amstrad CPC464,so the vintaging occupation is not my lucky area.
Awesome patina!
Don't forget, recently recapped.
L@@@@@@@K!!!!!!!!!!!!
1959, it was a very good year.
Yes, I was 5 !
I love how you give up and then don't give up
Thank you Shango, for doing these videos for us. I appreciate all the effort you put into them.
Whack all the transistors with a pencil to break the whiskers loose. That one capacitor had one leg totally unsoldered.
Basically ALL the solder joints looks suspect. I've seen cold solder joints before, but this holds the record!
Great videos.. Watching all of them from Viña del Mar Chil
Looks like someone with a decent 3D printer, some 3D modeling/design software and too much time could print a new case for it.
Or simply build a wooden cabinet for the internals.
Shango manages to surprise me and I end up laughing like a madman.
"i turned it on and the bird went nuts" 😂😂
He's on his way to becomming one of those "never speak" restoration channels that are trending for unknown reasons.
@@ct92404 I know that swhy Shango needs to make a couple to meme it out lol
About 30 minute mark, is why I respect you so much & am proud to consider myself a student of yours. What a birthday video, thanks man!
6:14 . . . The Sony was producing ultrasonic audio only capable of being heard by mourning doves.
If its baked then try eating it, baked transistors make a great snack.
Wow it was beautiful new
Good video as always, i like your fault finding. Keep up the good work 👍
Every video: "I give up, I can't fix it", then proceeds to fix it.
That's seems to be normal on this channel.
@@robertgaines-tulsa I'm like that too. Drives my boss _nuts_
That's the agony of electronics! 🤣
when you are about to give up, is usually when you find the problem you are looking for
sometimes you have to walk away from something and think about it for a little bit
Gilligan keeps breaking it. The Professor keeps fixing it.
DiamondBack662 putting the guts in a coconut sounds like a plan. Sell for big money.
Perhaps the transistors are whiskered internally, originally shorted but handling them cleared it enough for them to work?
My grandmother had one of these next to her bed. It was in prestine condition. I used to listen to it at night when I couldnt sleep when I stayed at my Grand parents. I think it was 60's anyways. I was actually sad to see it in such poor shape. Hers was not the greatest but it worked. I think they made several types. I wasnt far off on the date. My grandmother always took really great care of her stuff.
Morning Train was originally called 9 to 5 in the UK, but they changed it for the US because of the Dolly Parton hit.
is the uk still upset we kicked out the red coats?
Not a bad looking radio in its day. Amazed how well those simple circuits could work.
Rat piss will destroy the IF transformers similar to battery acid
Good video as always, Great fault finding. Keep up the good work 👍
I really enjoy getting all the technical specifications and explanations in the diagnosis. Top notch repair done right, not just slapping a bunch of new caps on a board and calling it good.
An excellent vid and Sheena Eson sinning in Japanese my day is complete,thank you
"Sheena Eston sinning in Japanese"
A mental picture is forming in my mind... and its _not_ good.
Now on Craigslist: Antique radio for sale. Normal wear and tear. This is a RARE collectors item. NO LOWBALLERS. I know what I have.
$79.95
I was hoping Dragen McSnurglefarrfle would get to talk to some telemarketers.
There used to be a deal that someone would bring me a broken computer, typewriter or even radio. I would tinker with them a bit and usually they would start working. I usually never knew what the hell fixed them, and it soon became known as the "Chief's Effect" (I was a police chief for 10 years.) Those days are now long gone, once in a great while someone will recall my unusual gift and bring me an injured or ill device, and if they ask nicely I will tinker with them, usually with the same effect.
I did seen one capacitor that was broken from the solder joint in this video where you started checking other capacitors. All and all, great video! Thank you for sharing!
Thank you Shango. I for one, appreciate your resurrection videos. Makes me think about people restoring things after the great apocalypse or something for survival.
I love the videos where you change your mined. You are so adamant about not worth fixing, than the next frame you change your mined.
Keep the videos coming.
I think we should 3D print a new housing that would be fun that would be fun
I love your videos hope you never stop making them
Yes, finally something to watch. Beer, Steak and youtube evening tonight :-D
Go vegetarian!
@@duanethamm4688 We aren't allowed to eat vegetarians here in norway. By definition they are peopole too.
Saints are the people who can live with you and your funnies.
@@eivindamundsen7090 I hear that their meat is too string-y anyway. : )
Another fantastic video. Keep 'em coming.
Thanks for the video, it’s making my wait at the airport fly by.
Ok, I just got to the end and not feeling so good anymore.
FANTASTIC!!!
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
BRAVO!
Clean Install, we will be at Knowledge Fest Thank you for the content
i like sony boomboxes, they have excellent quality and good looking. i have cfs1040s 27 years old and still working
Desperatley in need of "plastic" surgery
Kim Kardashian has more than enough plastic for several radios.
Awesome job man like
I am amazed at the power of Sony, I know they build good shit but this is beyond good, and your skills brought it back to life, sort of, a major win!
Nice one loved watching it.
loved the video Shang!
"--the bird went nuts..."
Its a rf, bird detector
Really enjoy your dry sense of humor working on something as munted as this sorry ancient thing. Fantastic skills-set indeed!
That’s a radio worth seeking out…especially after it won 🏆 the DX championship in the desert
Sony emotional support radio lives
radio: I'm not dead!
Garbled User no it was just ran over by an car or 3
Fantastic job
Used to heat em w s iron those old germanum xistors often recover.
Great video! In the beginning all that thing picked up was the Mourning Dove channel but you got it to pick up two news stations in two languages at once plus the super cheesy Karaoke network. Pretty neat radio, it actually sounds much better than I thought it would. Sony, ever the innovator!
As said, tin whiskers I reckon. The heat from the iron has probably cleared them, temporarily of course. Often tapping them will cause the fault to manifest itself. Really really common on the AF11x series seen on a lot of 60's UK sets
A large obstacle to the repair of these radios is a Board made of foil getinax. Thin tracks of copper foil fly off after the first re-soldering. Yesterday repaired a similar radio , now tracks have to be glued with cyanoacrylate. Laughed at the domestic germanium transistor MP 42 (as he there fell ?! heh ) like for video.
40:22 It may be kereoke but anything beats Shana Easton's screechy voice. Sony went all out with that thing: nice dial, almost-normal-sized AF transformers and a really beefy speaker for such a set. Even with two stations coming in at once, I can tell it sounded pretty good. Those AM/FM clock radios Sony was selling in the mid 1960s, the ones with the "deluxe" walnut case that looked a little home-made didn't sound nearly as good.
Excellent cheers shango, loved the reductorototweebulating dial.
He knows how to fix broken hoigy baimlers as well.
@@RoughJustice2k18 Not to mention the time he clinkoturbulated that Ford Explorer ignition switch.
I always want to put a mini Fred Astaire head under those top hat transistors. Many won't understand that.
ruclips.net/video/GKPMk5_gStk/видео.html
For some reason I kept laughing the last 15 minutes, man I love those videos! :)
So cool. I like bringing almost completely dead looking radios back to life. I also find that newly made alleged transistor substitutes (particularly germanium) do not work as well as the originals. For one Zenith 500 hand wired I had I had to hunt down and buy NOS transistors and hand pick the ones that worked best int he RF/IF stages. Good work!
i really find your videos very intresting keep it up buddy mad how u get this stuff working
I have a Sony TR74 from 1957/58, that also has those 2T NPN germanium transistors
Sheena Easton! Is there anything Asians won't copy?
I have got away with using pnp 2n2906 in place of AF117 in some applications. Perhaps 2N2904 could work for those, though the bias might need adjusting.
Several companies made these back in the late 50s and early 60s. A friend of mine had a channel master, that was like this. Pretty decent radio in fairly sensitive, I restored it for her and it was a fun project
This was so much FUN! thanks now for an 'Adult Cocktail'. ; ]
Glad to see Organ Donation put on hold for a Swing with Frankenstein, err ~ Two Timin' Jammin'.
when you said way low I couldn't help but think of the Furbish word for sleep hahaha
I had one of these a while back. Cute radio, didn't work very well. Probably had dried out Japanese electrolytics in it but I never bothered to change them. Nice reverse painted dial though.
That poor old radio needs a lot of T.L.C but hey, least it still works!
xxoo ❤️
I don't know...... That's actually quite an appealing "rat look, steampunk workshop radio"!
Without word of a lie, we once had a radio in similar condition (late '70s into early '80s). We never changed the station, never turned it off by switch - Just plugged it in in the morning, and unplugged it in the evening. It ran for years in that condition and never missed a beat. "Old Fido" we called it....
Daring google to try to catch a Copy right strike. I think the computers will be very confused.
Great video. Thanks. Would it be possible to use npn sillicium transistors by changing the values of the base resistors ?
probably the Ge npn transistors are grown junction types, typically using American process of those days
Those old ass germanium transistor's will do exactly what you experienced, they check bad but yet still work, the missing 2.8 vdc came back after you removed the first one, I bet throwing the heat from the iron on it caused it to start conducting again. Great job as always!
I remember you restored a console radio and had LA Oldies disco Saturday night on and played that disco song that seemed to never end. The Google song finder couldn't identify the song even though the song was playing clearly on that vintage radio. However, it was able to identify the song on this radio despite it being all garbly googly.
Excellent video. This is reality, indeed. 36:00 in and look at all the bad solder joints on that board! And the cracked caps on the top of the board, bad transistors... I am surprised this thing words at all. Geez.
You're like a modern-day version of an electronic Frankenstein, Shango066, LOL! Bringing dead electronic corpses from the dead. I can almost hear those circuits weakly whispering: "Who disturbs our peace?".
There's a really interesting documentary about the history of the Japanese semiconductor industry, and I remember it mentioning there was an event when transistors in radios started failing en masse sometime in the 1950's. This is probably not the case here but it's still a worthy watch.
excelente video, repare el plastico, se puede reconstruir toda la parte de plastico? (y)
I can't wait to see how you'll restore that cabinet. Epoxy?
Don't these old metal transistors get tin whiskers in them? Maybe just moving and manipulating them fixex them
I was thinking the same....
I read that happens and they can some times be treated to blow out the whiskers.
www.markhennessy.co.uk/articles/vintage_transistors.htm
heat from desoldering will temporarly open the internal shorts "Blow out" but it does not last. They need to be replaced with original parts or silicon with some conversion or the whole unit scrapped. The radios in it's physical condition is not worth full restoration and would be best used for parts to bring another radio back to life..
Nice Radio 📻😊
A brief look at a Baked, Toasted, Cooked, Frazzled, Roasted, Seared, Poached, Griddled and completely shot........Sony TR 712 from 1959 !
Hey buddy thank you for the video. In your experience what is or are the most sensitive am radios? Is it really the Panasonic rf-2200? I hope you can help,”.
Thanks,
Joe in CT
I found a blue one at a flea market. Made in Ireland!!
Vanguard made a very similar radio here in Spain from the 60s all the way through the 70s till they went out of business in 1981.The Vanguard Atlas. They came in different colors, some are AM/FM, AM/SW or AM/FM/SW.
1961 model:
www.radiomuseum.org/r/vanguard_atlas_5_pt_s65pts.html?language_id=5
1977 model:
www.radiomuseum.org/r/vanguard_super_atlas_fm80ptfm_80_p.html
No gear reduction tuning on those though, or at least on the videos I've seen online of Vanguards in operation.
Now I have only been tinkering with AM raidos since around 1958 when my dad let me begin servicing the old battery pack tube set that we used for our only source of entertainment on our farmstead up in rural North Dakota, where the electrical service failed to come to our place. It has been my experience that when you replace a leaky cap that has failed, you must remove it from the circuit because it places resistance in the circuit, and also allows DC voltage to leak across the leads messing up the balance of the entire set. Just a thought, this could be the problem, or part of it at any rate. Also if you salvage caps from old boards, you should use a leakage detector to see if they leak DC. A cap can check great but still leak DC, and if so can mess with your circuit as well as, in some cases put AC to the entire set and make it a bit dangerous with AC units.
So most of this older transistor stuff up thru the mid-60's or so has germanium transistors, which could be expensive or even un-obtainable. Especially if the application is higher power like an audio amp. So is it practical to consider re-biasing the given circuit sections for Silicon Transistors over Germanium to return it to functionality? From what I've read is that if the battery voltage is too low it may not work given the higher base-emitter voltage of 0.2V to 0.6V of Silicon. Just looking of an opinion.
I wonder if you could swap the polarity of the Electrolytic Capacitors and the Battery round and then use PNP Germanium Transistors instead?It would just mean your voltages were negative instead of positive wouldn't it?
You are the manl Shango066 this is definate proof that you can polish a fecies
I bet that Misc. White wire at the bottom of the set went to that missing white wire on the Antenna :P
Nice radio.
Shango066 please do a video of a 2004 Toyota Sienna, if one becomes available to you