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

High concentration of radios in North/Northeast
#1

I have noticed an unusually large concentration of vintage radios for sale in the North and Northeast. I seldom see any in the South. What can account for this skewed distribution of Philco radios?
as always
Garrett Meadows
#2

I have alway thought this too... I have had a lot of conversations with collectors on this subject... Many of them, and I believe it myself, was population and wealth... Also most of the radio manufacturers where in the eastern half of the country... Take Philco, they where out of Philadelphia... RCA, they where out of New Jersey... Zenith, they where out of Chicago.. There was a lot higher population and wealth in the north eastern part of the country at the times these radios where built.... most of those radios have stayed in that area for the last 70+ years, and are now coming up for sale... I live out in South Dakota and there are barely any high end radios here... Back then there was little to no population here and no one could afford most radios... Plus most of the farms here didnt even get modern electricity until the late 40's into the 50's... Most of what you see here are farm radios(battery powered) and for some reason a lot of Silvertones... Most likely due to the Sears & Roebuck catalogs and that they too where located in Chicago... The last couple radios I bought where a Zenith 15U269 and a pair of 38-690's... I had to drive 21 hours round trip to get them because those types of radios just never made it this far west... And from what it sounds like, the South too... It seems to me that all the money was in the Northeast at the time and that is where the radio manufacturers where located, so thats where all the radios ended up...
#3

I had a similar train of thought: concentration of wealth, proliferation of manufacturers, etc. From the 1920s to as late as the 1950s, the majority of the south was still undeveloped and poor. Like you, I've resigned myself to harsh reality that if I am ever going to own the kind of console Philco radio I want, I'm going to have to drive perhaps a 1000 miles. I can fully appreciate driving 21 hours round trip. I live in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and there was a guy in Houston whose father died and left behind some Philco radios he was selling. Before I could could get away to drive to Houston, the radios were snapped up. There was a guy in Vermont who had the exact console Philco I wanted. I was going to send him the money to pay for the radio and hold it until I could find some way to get it. After facing reality, I let it go. Oh well. I'm hoping to find someone in the forum with a console Philco to sell and hang on to it until I can orchestrate some way to get. So, the search continues. Thanks for your response. I appreciate it. as always, Garrett Meadows
#4

So what pray tell are you looking for in terms of a Philco console??
If you have some time to kill in a couple of weeks there is a BIG radio meet in Pa. Lots of folks and radios too. A lot of times the consoles go begging unless their something special.

When my pals were reading comic books
I was down in the basement in my dad's
workshop. Perusing his Sam's Photofoacts
Vol 1-50 admiring the old set and trying to
figure out what all those squiggly meant.
Circa 1966
Now I think I've got!

Terry
#5

The radios are up here because Kirk aka Old Restorer has bought 75 percent of the radios available for sale in the United States Icon_wink

Paul

Tubetalk1
#6

Not just radios. Look at the locations of most any vintage electronics--test equipment--or whatever. The bulk of it is east or northeast.

Rob
#7

I found this information on the American Radio History website. It starts on page 24 and list a breakdown of all the radio homes as if Jan 1, 1937. Not sure how this was all obtained, but interesting none the less. Pretty much matches what we knew all along.

http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Arch...937-01.pdf
#8

Very interesting. (I love that website!)
Rob




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Electrolytic restuffing/internals
I just taped the two pieces of the cap together, but I can see your method is better. I just held the lead in with solde...bridkarl — 08:18 PM
Electrolytic restuffing/internals
hello bridkarl, Well done ! Here is a Photo of the base of Philco capacitor that I cut open you can see how I glued th...radiorich — 08:14 PM
philco predicta
Hi CGL18, Here is a link for the schematic from the Early television Foundation: WARNING!! One side of the Chassis i...MrFixr55 — 08:09 PM
The list of my radio & TV collection!
Peter; I like Canadian General Electric sets, whilst the model numbers are often the same as their U.S General Electr...Arran — 05:44 PM
Electrolytic restuffing/internals
Did as suggested. Cut can with hacksaw, removed internals, attached new 8mf cap - with ample use of cardboard and elec...bridkarl — 03:36 PM
The list of my radio & TV collection!
For fans of antique radio... My new video... How to test radio tubes on a Hickok 530B tube tester? Test radio tubes o...RadioSvit — 01:25 PM
philcorepairbench.com - shadow-meter
Thank you Billpoulsbobill — 11:53 AM
philcorepairbench.com - shadow-meter
Hi, Try here Philco Service Hints & Tips, Number 1 It's from the web archive (Way Back Machine).Keith — 10:17 AM
PT-6 finished!!
Hi Arran,  Yes, you are correct, the "nominal" voltage for these Loctal tubes was the same 6.3 or 12.6 V as...MrFixr55 — 07:48 AM
PT-6 finished!!
Actually the Loctal tube series, with number beginning with "14" are 12.6 volt tubes, at 150 ma, I'm not sure ...Arran — 02:14 AM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 1087 online users. [Complete List]
» 4 Member(s) | 1083 Guest(s)
AvatarAvatarAvatarAvatar

>