#1
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I vote for keeping Canadian TVs in the other forums
Does Canada count as international? If so most of my posts should
Move here... However they're so similar to US models I think it wouldn't be productive to move them. I vote to keep the Canadian TVs with the American ones in the original forums. |
#2
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Absolutely right. I changed the forum description to "outside North America"
But in either event, you're welcome to post Canadian TVs wherever you wish. We're pretty loose with the structuring. The whole reason I created the forum was because I ran into an influx of Australian TV collectors on Facebook
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"Restoring a tube TV is like going to war. A color one is like a land war in Asia." |
#3
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There are a few ways of looking at international tv's. By nationality where they are used,
by company name, and by broadcast system. There are a few countries that used NTSC just like here, and I find exploring the sets that use our system, but not sold in our market to be very interesting.... I find it interesting for example, that Robb finds many boom boxes at yard sales with short wave bands, and these are Panasonics, and Sanyo's just like we may have had here, but made specifically for the Canada Market, or other non US markets as well...
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Yes you can call me "Squirrel boy" |
#4
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Canada didn't have many of its own brands, i.e. Electrohome sets were re-badged Mitsubishis for a while. No idea what the Viking sets were based on, it was an Eaton's house brand.
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#5
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Electrohome Rogers Rogers/Majestic and later made in Canada Philips sets. Eaton Viking (house brand at Eatons) Marconi Baycrest (house brand at the Bay) RCA Victor (early ones made in Montreal, not the same as the US models) Transonic (house brand at Woodwards) Clairtone Fleetwood (made in Montreal, I have a Fleetwood made Silvertone branded CTC-16 knock off) Electrohome were not Mitsubishi until well into the 80s, they had lots of unique to Canada products. I am sure I am missing lots here, not to mention the big names like Admiral, GE, Westinghouse etc who had Canadian subsidiaries which made TVs and radios paralleling the US models with subtle differences. Quite often when I see an old TV "in the wild" it is not a model which also sold in the USA, especially if it's from before 1970. Despite that Canada had unique products I just think that the Made in Canada sets are not any different from mainstream US products than, say, Packard Bell in California is different from RCA in New Jersey. They're built to more or less the same standard as American TVs, (aside from 25Hz transformers in really early 50s stuff built for Ontario).and I would rather have access to the NTSC TV repair experts in the main forums, than post in a separate forum where PAL and other systems dominate. Last edited by maxhifi; 05-26-2014 at 03:28 PM. |
Audiokarma |
#6
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The only consumer, Fairbanks-Morse products, sold in the U.S. were radios and refrigerators, before 1940. Other F-M products, known here were Diesel engines, pumps, locomotives and large electric motors and generators. I've seen a few Eaton's mid 60's portable 19" sets. The chassis looked like Canadian Admirals. They were badged "Royalmont". The labeling on the bottom, stated "Eatons" of Canada. |
#7
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Speaking of Eaton's labels, here's the label behind my dryer door: Last edited by Jon A.; 09-29-2015 at 04:05 PM. |
#8
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I see it's rated for 208 volts, Y network power, used in large apartment complexes. At 208 volts, the heating element produces less heat and the drying process, takes a little longer. |
#9
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Keeping US- Canadian together is best.
Many sets go back & fourth across the boarder. The ones that dont are near identical. In Mass. Vikings ( Admirals) were often seen & quite a few real Electrohomes. Even fixed an Electrohome built console stereo once. If you see an Advent Video Beam set it either has a Sylvania or Electrohome chassis. The Electrohome built sets are as good as any middle tier US set & near an RCA or Zenith. IMHO all you Canadian cats should have one in your collections. 73 Zeno |
#10
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Audiokarma |
#11
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I don't want to argue with a free forum, but I think there are too many "specialty" boards as it is.
I like seeing stuff from the rest of the world, but if I hadn't noticed this sub-board today I would have missed it (I almost never log on from an actual computer, just use bookmarks on my phone). Australians were already held back from color development because of kangaroos sensitivity to high-voltage "whine"; we shouldn't isolate them in some foreign-tv backwater
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From Captain Video, 1/4/2007 "It seems that Italian people are very prone to preserve antique stuff." |
#12
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Things do get a tad confusing when sets from outside North America do come up, and having another sub-board isn't going to use up any more server space, so it can't hurt really. At least those who are interested in sets from other parts of the world will know where to look for any info we might have.
I don't know. It's not a coin-op machine, so it isn't for apartment complexes. |
#13
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What's ironic is I just picked up a Canadian Marconi table top tv from 1953 which is loaded full of made in England parts... It came up just as I got the predicta for really cheap, it's amazing how primitive it is compared to the predicta
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#14
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My Magnavox Star System/Touch Tune remotes were made in Germany, go figure.
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#15
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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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