Welcome Guest! Be sure you know and follow the Phorum Rules before posting. Thank you and Enjoy! (January 12) x

Thread Closed
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

16B Shouldered Tombstone
#1

I just acquired a 16B shouldered tombstone(4 band). Yes, the mangled one recently on eBay. Amazingly, it "survived" shipping. This should be a fun project. Nothing like taking something from the junk pile and making it look good again! My question is about the orginal finish.

Are the sides, top, and front trim dark(Van Dyke Brown)? The majority of the front medium walnut? The section between the stripes and below the escutcheon lighter walnut?

I think I can get away with replacing the top and side panels with something other than walnut as it will have dark toned lacquer applied. Probably won't see much of the wood. I may use walnut anyway to keep it as "original" as possible. The tough part is finding plywood that is about 13/32" thick. That seems to be what it measures. I guess I can take a piece of 1/2" through a wide belt sander and take 3/32" off the back.

Also, is the escutcheon suppose to have glass in it? Sorry, I guess that's quite a few questions. Thanks.

Derek
#2

Derek

No, in this case, the darker areas are not that real dark Van Dyke brown. The front panel is Medium Walnut; the rest of the cabinet is a darker shade of walnut; say, Medium Dark Walnut. Tone the darker areas of the cabinet fairly lightly; i.e. not so much that you make the woodgrain disappear as you would with the Deco 16B tombstone and Van Dyke brown.

If you don't go overboard with the Medium Walnut on the front panel (again, tone lightly), the center section will come out looking O.K., different than the rest of the front panel.

No, the escutcheon does not have any glass in it.

Good luck - that is going to be quite a project. I have one just like yours but in somewhat better shape; the sides are delaminating but the set is otherwise O.K. It will require refinishing. While I am selling several of my radios, I'm keeping this one. Eventually, on some of my days off the road, I'll get it restored.

--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN
#3

Thanks again for the help Ron. I'll give that a try.

Derek




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
The thrill is gone again, thought I was close to being done with it. Well Friday it was receiving broadcast, Saturday mo...osanders0311 — 07:47 PM
Help with Supreme 599
Iam getting closer to fixing it. I bumped Up the tranny voltage to get 5v on the 80 tube. I gan get the needle to move ...daveone23 — 03:41 PM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Hello RodB, Checking my previous post I realized you're the one with the 42-340. I replaced the string for the tuning...osanders0311 — 03:12 PM
5U4 vs 5Z4 tubes
I saw no evidence of anything going wrong. The transformer is fused already which is nice. Interestingly the 5z4 did...bridkarl — 02:37 PM
5U4 vs 5Z4 tubes
I doubt anything cooked in 30 seconds because of the oops! These are very similar tubes, and nothing but transformer re...GarySP — 02:30 PM
Restoration of the Canadian General Electric A-87
Paul Philco322.You will be keeping very busy, you may have to go back to work for a breakIcon_smile. Paul To rel...RadioSvit — 01:57 PM
5U4 vs 5Z4 tubes
I grabbed the wrong tube and put in a 5U4 tube instead of the 5Z4 - I just had the rectifier in with no other tubes. Af...bridkarl — 01:54 PM
Restoration of the Canadian General Electric A-87
After applying the filler to the entire body, I noticed that the shades of the facade and the side and top walls were ve...RadioSvit — 01:49 PM
Restoration of the Canadian General Electric A-87
You will be keeping very busy, you may have to go back to work for a break:). PaulPaul Philco322 — 01:46 PM
Restoration of the Canadian General Electric A-87
After removing the control knobs, chassis, dynamics and scale frame, I first started restoring the torn piece of veneer....RadioSvit — 01:20 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 845 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 844 Guest(s)
Avatar

>