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Craigslist GE E-81
#1

Working, but with a loud hum. Cabinet pretty sun faded. But it's complete and solid.

[Image: http://i1319.photobucket.com/albums/t679...8cc84d.jpg]

[Image: http://i1319.photobucket.com/albums/t679...65eb76.jpg]
#2

Why are you playing it without recapping first?

Bad groundhog! bad Icon_lol

Seriously, It is a nice radio and the chassis looks pretty clean too.

Recapping usually helps the hum for me. If not, I send it to my electrician Icon_mrgreen

Show us your progress as you go.

Kirk

Times I have been electrocuted in 2021
As of 1/01/2021
AC: 4 DC: 1
Last year: 6
#3

Yea...I know. I am a heathen.

But to be truthful, when I was looking at it the owner insisted on plugging it in to "prove it worked". I guess that made him feel justified in not reducing his price even 5 bucks. Had to pay $50. I don't know if all of GE's schematics are as good as the one for this radio I found on Nostalgia Air, if so, I may start looking for more GE's...very complete and informative.
#4

Ah;
An American G.E E-81, as opposed to a Canadian G.E E-81, like this for example:

http://www.radioatticarchives.com/radio.htm?radio=10141

Regards
Arran
#5

Looks like an RCA.
#6

Last winter I picked up a GE E-81. I recapped it and did the cabinet
and I added a phono input. it turned out nice and sounded very good with a rich tone. Here are some photos.


Attached Files Image(s)
               
#7

In Canada the RCA-Victor Company of Montreal, and the Canadian General Electric Company of Toronto shared chassis with one another. It was not quite like in the U.S where RCA made chassis for G.E and Westinghouse from 1930-34 though, they were actually made in two separate factories, and they used entirely different cabinets. In the U.S that was the result of an anti trust judgement against RCA's patent pool in 1930, it did not apply to Canada. Many Canadian RCA and G.E sets shared chassis, right up into the late 1940s, but the ones from 1939 onward were often uniquely Canadian designed like the JK-70 or A-23 for examples.
The RCA version of this set was an 8T in the U.S, or an 8T1 in Canada, I picked up a chassis from a U.S RCA 7K for replacing my badly rusted chassis in my CGE E-81 about a year ago. The E-81 on Radio Attic is entirely original cabinet wise, note that the strip of veneer bellow the knobs was shaded like the rest of the bottom 3'' of the cabinet. It would be interesting to have an example of each set to compare, although I think that the U.S E-81 would likely win given the tuned R.F amplifier stage, the Canadian E-81 has separate mixer and oscillator tubes which may help on shortwave, both wasted a socket on that useless 6H6 tube.
Regards
Arran




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