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

Philco 47-1230 Dial Scale Gasket
#1

I've recently restored a Philco 47-1230 console. Everything is about complete, but I need to know the proper size and channel thickness of the rubber gasket that surrounds the glass dial scale. The original piece was so dry and deteriorated that it just crumbled into dust when I removed the glass scale. I also need the size and thickness to put a new round gasket on a Zenith 8-S-563 from 1941. Will this modern rubber be any problem (tight fit and lay flat) to installing this on the round and concave piece of glass? Thanks for any help, shaler78
#2

For most cases, I have found that a new rubber band, cut open, and lightly glued with "Elmer's" to the glass side (not the side with the printing) will do nicely. For the other side, which would be the metal clips, glue another rubber band segment to the clip, and let it dry before putting the thing back together. The new "rubber" material should be just a little thicker than the "dust" you scrape off, but go slowly when putting it back together. If it seems to be too tight, remove what you have done and replace with a thinner piece of rubber band. Make sure there are no pieces of crud when you assemble the piece, else you will break the glass. If you are screwing into the wood, and the thread does not hold, you can fill the hole with a tiny bit of wood putty, and make a new pilot hole with a tiny drill bit or awl. Try the screw into your repair without the glass in place to test your result. Finish and polish the cabinet completely before you attach the dial scale. Dot the adjusting screws with a tiny bit of glue when they are all finished, to make sure they do not move again. Anyway this is how I do it. Slow and real careful. Same procedure applies to deteriorated gaskets for speakers, but be careful to make sure everything is bone dry so you can get the assembly apart again if you ever need to, (and you probably will.) Hope this helps some.




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Part numbers to model cross
Thank you morzh, that is exactly what I was looking for. Now , is there some where that shows pinouts for Philco power ...Jim Dutridge — 11:37 AM
Restoration of the Canadian General Electric A-87
Thanks for your help Michael. In fact, this video is only an intermediate result. Later I had to apply another tinting l...RadioSvit — 09:01 AM
Restoration of the Canadian General Electric A-87
Great job on the cabinet. PS. In the US notation, "kenotron" refers to specific type of tubes; we call re...morzh — 08:24 AM
Part numbers to model cross
This document has at least some tables of models and parts used. Example: Choke 32-7572, used in 604 radio. Search f...morzh — 08:19 AM
Restoration of the Canadian General Electric A-87
I also checked all the radio tubes on my Hickok 530 tube tester. The 5Z3 kenotron turned out to be faulty, all the other...RadioSvit — 08:02 AM
Restoration of the Canadian General Electric A-87
Well... While the varnish is drying up, I started repairing the chassis... Of course I started by replacing the pa...RadioSvit — 07:12 AM
Philco Model 38-7: what caps & resistors do fail typically?
Hello Martin, Welcome aboard our little community what great Model 38-7 Sincerely Richardradiorich — 12:30 AM
Philco Model 38-7: what caps & resistors do fail typically?
Welcome to the Phorum Martin. I count about 9 paper caps, the 3 electrolytic caps and 2-Y2 safety caps to replace th...RodB — 09:44 PM
Part numbers to model cross
Jim, We have this index put together by Dale Cook but I don't think that is quite what you are looking for. The Parts...klondike98 — 09:37 PM
Philco Model 38-7: what caps & resistors do fail typically?
Yep the dim bulb test is OK but I'd definitely replace all those electrolytics before I did it. Since those #47 conden...klondike98 — 09:18 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 1192 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 1191 Guest(s)
Avatar

>