#1
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National NC98
Picked this up from a CL ad the other day. The filter cap's had already been replaced, so I only had to replace the paper cap's. It worked fairly well, but after replacing a couple of resistors that had drifted way up in value, and a good alignment touch-up, this old girl performs really well.
I removed the chassis and knobs, and used automobile compound on the cabinet, followed by polish, and then a couple good coats of wax with an electric buffer. The cabinet turned out really slick |
#2
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It looks great. ........But it would look so much better right side up.
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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 |
#3
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It sure would, I just couldn't figure out how to do it.
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#4
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Perhaps put the photo on a PC, open it with a windows photo/image viewing program, press the program's rotate button till it's right side up, save it, and upload that...It has worked for me. You could also get a free image hosting account and copy-paste the [IMG] code from there into your posts like I do (hosting sites have nice easy image editing tools).
Your national is reminding me that I need to get back to my national HRO-50 restoration...I recapped it and let it sit. It needs so much more cosmetically and electrically....I'm going to have to remember the car polish trick. I have that stuff around for my car, but never thought to try it on anything else.
__________________
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 |
#5
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Here she is...
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Audiokarma |
#6
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#7
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Quote:
The trick is to use a small electric orbital buffer (less than $30 @ Harbor Freight) to do the work. I used very little pressure, and let the machine do the work. That way, there was no damage to the lettering. Electrically, this radio needed minimal work. After finding a 10 meg resistor that had drifted up past 13 meg, I ended up checking every one and found a couple others that were out of spec. Using the instructions from the Sams Photofact, I done a complete alignment job. While it doesn't perform like my Hallicrafters SX62, the NC98 is a pretty hot receiver. The AM band performance is amazing, and the crystal-controlled adjustable selectivity feature works great (while having a minimal effect on sensitivity). |
#8
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On the knobs, I used Appliance Cleaner/Wax spray from Fuller Brush Co. The band switch knob is dull and discolored, so I'd guess it's not original. I may run up on a replacement for that someday....everything else looks so good that knob kind of stands out.
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