Share your favorites on Show & Tell

1951 Capehart TV Technician's Guide

In Paper > Brochures > Show & Tell.
Paper159 of 28671975 ADM-3A Operator's Handbook1928 QST Magazines
6
Love it
0
Like it

Vynil33rpmVynil33rpm loves this.
AnythingObscureAnythingObscure loves this.
SEAN68SEAN68 loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
jscott0363jscott0363 loves this.
See 4 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 4 years ago

    dav2no1
    (839 items)

    1951 Capehart TV Technician's Guide

    Approximately 6 1/2" x 4 1/4"
    March 1951 First Edition
    Price $0.10

    TV technicians guide. Has instructions for tuning your TV, etc.

    "Capehart Corp.; Fort Wayne, Indiana: Trade name Amperion. Founded 1927, went into bankrupty in march 1939 and was taken over by Farnsworth Television & Radio Corp. Farnsworth kept using the trade name Capehart for some products and later changed even its name to Capehart-Farnsworth Television & Radio Corp."

    logo
    Brochures
    See all
    1918 International harvester Titan 10-20 Kerosene Tractor Sales Brochure Catalog
    1918 International harvester Titan ...
    $219
    John Deere HN Tractor For the Vegetable Grower For 1945 Brochure FCCA24 RARE
    John Deere HN Tractor For the Veget...
    $112
    IH International Harvester 66 86 Series Tools Dealer Sales Brochure Rough Shape
    IH International Harvester 66 86 Se...
    $27
    1919 International Harvester McCormick Binder Sales Brochure Poster
    1919 International Harvester McCorm...
    $27
    logo
    1918 International harvester Titan 10-20 Kerosene Tractor Sales Brochure Catalog
    1918 International harvester Titan ...
    $219
    See all

    Comments

    1. AnythingObscure AnythingObscure, 3 years ago
      Dave, is this the same CAPEHART that also made the now rather infamous automatic 78RPM record changers (that also flipped the records) and mechanical bridge tables that dealt their own cards?? (both those would have been earlier than TV sets, if so)
    2. AnythingObscure AnythingObscure, 3 years ago
      Oops, I answered my own question -- it IS apparently the same as the record-changer (the AMPERION you mention) though no doubt before TV sets. My BAD in that I got the bridge table wrong, the HAMMOND Company of Chicago made those. (also clocks and electric organs)

      Here's the record changer -- can you imagine such a contraption banging fragile shellac discs around?? <lol>

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptwvMDUJUcs

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.