might be interested in those radios
I mentioned the multiband to him a few months ago.
Conversely, I might be interested in fixing the multiband and I'd give him the other one and/or cash or some arrangement if interested.
I'd price the Philco closer to $100-150, maybe $100 more if it worked well. The Delco, maybe $50-100. Old radios of this nature don't always sell well - people certainly try to get big bucks out of them at antique stores, but they don't sell because they're just not worth it in unknown condition. I see fully working cathedrals and tombstones at shows for 3-400. I usually use eBay as a guide - eBay is 2x the price of a show, but you need to be really careful with the stuff you find there, and of course shipping and other charges make a lot of that not worthwhile.
The Philco would probably be harder to fix than it's worth, especially if there's anything wrong with the FM circuit. Some of those tubes can be pricey or hard to get. In particular, this uses an obsoletium tube called the FM1000 - Philco made this for their radios and it's been obsolete since the war. I don't know if I'd bother with this one unless you really want a working device. If it's in good physical condition, it's a shelf queen.
The Delco unit, on the other hand, is an interesting beast. It's a 6-tube "AA5" style radio - that is, it has a tuned RF stage before the IF stages, it was designed to be a long distance receiver. It uses older octal tubes, but these are generally easy to fix - but they can take a lot of time to fix properly. Chances are every part in there is bad and/or leaky. If I were doing this for myself and I wanted it to work, there's probably $100ish in parts and 20 hours of labor over the course of several days to fix. To make it "just work" it probably just needs filters.
I sent you the philco link before, I believe, here's one for the Delco: https://www.radiomuseum.org/r/united_1_r1227.html
Radiomuseum does require an email account to download, just use a temp mail. I contribute enough to the site so you can use my cred.
I started to question if you really are a stupid bird
it's a shelf queen.
As it has been since about 1975. It looks so cool, wish it worked. I remember the speaker was heavy on the base and virtually non-existent treble, that unique sound you get from.the old radios.
The Delco is far less visually appealing to me, although the black bakelite case is intact and everything externally generally appears to be in good shape. I vaguely remember the Delco in my folks kitchen when I was about 4 y/o. I don't remember if/when it stopped working. It's been stashed away on a shelf in the basement ... which sometimes gets a bit humid.
Sounds like they both will remain shelf queens. Maybe someday I'll replace the filters on the Delco but I can think of 10000 things I need to get done that are in front of that project.
Thanks for the professional insight!
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