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Monarch "Hi-Fi Master" Plastic AA5 Tube Midget AM Radio
Bought this Monarch "Hi-Fi Master" Plastic Tube Midget AM Radio on ePay for a reasonable price.
Seemed like it was in near mint condition. I'm not sure what year it is from, but probably mid 1950's to 1962. It has the 'CD' markings on it so it pre 1962 for sure. It is a very small 5 tube radio measuring 6.5w x 4.5h x 3.75d inch Video here: http://youtu.be/80x6fyxQTR0
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C'yoot Widdle feller...(Boy, I just LOVE drivin' my Spell-Check Nutz...)
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Benevolent Despot |
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Said it over on AK...that sucker is dead mint!
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Let me live in the house beside the road and be a friend to man. |
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Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
Audiokarma |
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"I'm a Barbie Gurrrl, inna Barbie Wurrld..." I've TOLD youse guys DON'T Get Me Started...(grin)
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Benevolent Despot |
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This category of radio is exactly the kind of thing I like, great find!
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Quote:
The one shown, has the Los Angeles inspection label on it. All the Monarch or Monacor line operated products had it. In some locals, electrical products couldn't be sold if it didn't have approval by a recognized testing agency. |
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That is one nice looking little radio. I was always partial to the styling of the little imported AA5's from the end of the tube era. The quality was usually a little questionable, but the styling sure made up for it.
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Audiokarma |
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They were really inexpensive and the circuitry was really lacking. It doesn't appear to have any AVC circuit and all of them had a single tuned 2nd IF coil. The IF band width was very narrow, so the fidelity was poor. Coupled to the tiny speaker and output transformer, made it even worse.
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Quote:
btw, I have not seen a smaller sized Tube radio !
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You're mentioning the mortality rate. Same thing with the early Japanese transistor and the tube type pocket size portable radios. Combine that with the high cost of operating the pocket tube sets, didn't help either.
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Someone on another forum mentioned these are killer radios, meaning they can kill you if you poke inside with a metal object, such as a knitting needle or a straightened paperclip or if faulty, you touch any of the external metal - of which there seems to be quite a lot on the back.
Modern Class II items require two pieces of insulation to break down or get bypassed before danger can arise. 1950s/60s live chassis sets require just one failure or no failures combined with operator error. Is this true ??
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Yep, it's true. Hot chassis sets can zap you if you touch any of the metal surfaces while there is any power going to the set.
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Dumont-First with the finest in television. |
Audiokarma |
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