June 12, 2008

Television Picture Attachment Uses Any A.C. Set for Sound (Aug, 1939)

Television Picture Attachment Uses Any A.C. Set for Sound
Utilizing the chassis and loud speaker of any a.c.-operated radio for accompanying sound, this table-model attachment reproduces television images for direct viewing. It plugs into your regular receiver in the same manner that you would connect a record player. The picture is 3-3/8 in. by 4-3/8 in. Five television receiving channels are provided.

6 Comments »

  1. What an amazing device to pacify the public. Did we really know what we were getting into when introducing passive entertainment to the home? I still can’t shake how much television plays a role in my life, even if I do see what it does to me.

    Comment by Suzanne — June 12, 2008 @ 11:04 am

  2. Did leaving out the audio amplifier and loudspeaker significantly reduce the cost of the set?

    Radios had auxiliary inputs? I wouldn’t have expected that. Can I plug in my iPod?

    Comment by jayessell — June 13, 2008 @ 5:20 am

  3. Yes, leaving out the audio sections would dramatically reduce the costs. Good radios had very large audio-output transformers (as did good AM transmitters) and good loudspeakers were not at all inexpensive either.

    Yes, as a matter of fact, you could easily plug in your iPod on one of these and it would play through the radio. I used to do that fairly often with a reel-to-reel recorder (remember those?) to play old radio shows through console radios for display.

    The auxiliary inputs were usually fitted on radios so that they could host a turntable, rather than for anything like a wire recorder (very expensive technology).

    ALan

    Comment by Alan J. Richer — June 13, 2008 @ 2:37 pm

  4. ALan:
    Thanks!
    Of course, our home theaters of today use separate amps and speakers.

    I was kidding about the iPod.
    I think there would be impedance mismatch issues.

    Comment by jayessell — June 13, 2008 @ 3:22 pm

  5. Back in the late 1930′s my dad brought home a big Philco console radio and phonograph. It had a bunch of push buttons that could be set to various stations on the dial for fast tuning. One of the buttons had “television” printed on it. I asked him what that was for and he proudly said that when television eventually arrived, we would be able to just attach a special unit onto the console and be all set! Of course that never happened in our case; a rather large war got in the way, but I suppose that it would have looked something like this thing had it ever been built. Interesting.

    Comment by Rick Segedi — June 14, 2008 @ 6:02 pm

  6. Trf4Tz Thanks for good post

    Comment by johnny — December 29, 2008 @ 7:28 am

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