7T10 (-N) Ch= 5K1 (UL5K1) Octal and Loctal

Admiral (brand) Continental Radio & Television Co.; Chicago, IL

  • Anno
  • 1947/1948
perfect model
  • Categoria
  • Radio (o sintonizzatore del dopoguerra WW2)
  • Radiomuseum.org ID
  • 31388
    • alternative name: Continental Radio & TV

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 Specifiche tecniche

  • Numero di tubi
  • 5
  • Principio generale
  • Supereterodina (in generale); ZF/IF 455 kHz
  • N. di circuiti accordati
  • 6 Circuiti Mod. Amp. (AM)
  • Gamme d'onda
  • Solo onde medie (OM).
  • Tensioni di funzionamento
  • Alimentazione universale (doppia: CC/CA) / 117 Volt
  • Altoparlante
  • AP magnetodinamico (magnete permanente e bobina mobile) / Ø 5 inch = 12.7 cm
  • Materiali
  • Bachelite
  • Radiomuseum.org
  • Modello: 7T10 Ch= 5K1 [Octal and Loctal] - Admiral brand Continental
  • Forma
  • Soprammobile compatto/con bordi arrotondati/midget senza pulsantiera/tastiera.<= 35 cm (Sometimes with handle but for mains only).
  • Dimensioni (LxAxP)
  • 13 x 8 x 7 inch / 330 x 203 x 178 mm
  • Annotazioni
  • Built-in loop antenna. There is also a variant which employs Octall tubes only.

    Colors:

    • 7T10E = ebony / black
    • 7T10M = mahogany
    • 7T10C = ivory
    • ebony w/ ivory louver (mentioned in Rider's 17)
    • ivory w/ ebony louver (mentioned in Rider's 17)

    The difference between models with and without -N suffix is currently unknown.

  • Peso netto
  • 6 lb 8 oz (6.5 lb) / 2.951 kg
  • Prezzo nel primo anno
  • 19.95 $
  • Fonte esterna dei dati
  • Ernst Erb
  • Riferimenti schemi
  • Rider's Perpetual, Volume 17 = 1948 and before

 Collezioni | Musei | Letteratura

Collezioni

Il modello 7T10 (-N) fa parte delle collezioni dei seguenti membri.

 Forum

Discussioni nel forum su questo modello: Admiral brand: 7T10 Ch= 5K1

Argomenti: 1 | Articoli: 2

This is my first post, and I'm a beginner.  I got this radio out of a barn loft and I'm guessing it hasn't been used in 30 to 40 years.  I opened it up and saw that the speaker cone had been eaten out and a blown capacitor was hanging loose.  I decided to restore this radio.  I replaced all of the paper capacitors with new modern capacitors.  I found a used speaker on ebay which was the same model.  I just got finished with it and turned it on and to my joy it warmed up quickly and I started receiveing stations right away.  My question is, is it normal in an old am radio to get signal bleeds of other stations trying to come in on the same frequency?  I live about 35 miles from a big city and get some of the stations very strong, but with other stations being lightly heard trying to come in on that frequency also.  I've picked up stations in other states also, with the same problem.  I have not done anything else to the radio other than clean the tuner with contact cleaner.  It was dirty and a little corroded.  When I rotate the dial, it moves freely after using the contact cleaner.  The sound is great and nice volume without distortion.

Tim Dees, 07.Mar.12

Weitere Posts (2) zu diesem Thema.