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1960 RCA VICTOR TV SET W/ REMOTE PROMO FILMS & "THE INSIDE STORY" OF THE RCA TV RECEIVER 91534 

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This compilation reel consists of a series of longform commercials made by the Jam Handy Organization to promote RCA Victor's 1960 line of black & white TV sets. This included innovations such as a remote control and timed on and off. RCA Victor was formed when, in 1929, the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) bought the “Victor Talking Machine Company”, creating the “RCA Victor” brand. The four commercials included in this film cover the promotion of groundbreaking television technology including “The Programmer with the Magic Memory” and “The Hillsborough with New Hideaway Styling” (a new console television that folds into a piece of furniture so as to conceal the all-seeing picture tube), followed by “A Cinch to Service” covering the service and reliability of RCA Victor products, and lastly “The Inside Story” describing the entire technical framework and contents of the black and white television receiver chassis.
A man is promoting a TV remote control to a woman, presenting the features on a television (00:06). “The Programmer with the Magic Memory” commercial title (02:35). (Note: Robert Adler invented the first practical, wireless television remote control. Introduced as the "Space Command" by RCA's rival Zenith in 1956.) A man is reading a magazine, seated in a lounge chair (02:52). His television automatically turns on (03:23). Earlier that evening, he pre-selected his television schedule using the RCA Victor Programmer Model named the “Magic Memory Program Selector”(03:35). The television automatically turns off while the viewer fell asleep (05:46). “The Hillsborough with New Hideaway Styling” commercial title (06:27). A woman is promoting the Hillsborough TV hidden inside an unfolding console (06:43). She converts the TV back into the stylish console (08:19). “A Cinch to Service” commercial title (08:48). An RCA Victor technician is familiarizing himself with the innovative new technology of RCA Victors products in a workroom (09:05). An RCA victor salesman enters (09:20). They converse about the remarkable technology and the simple and easy process of performing service on it (09:38). The technician explains function such as the dependable power transformer, the humagar capacitor for humidity protection, and the tube-guard for gradual warm-up, to the salesman (11:16). The salesman explains about the RCA Victor security seal circuit (14:26). “The Inside Story” commercial title (18:15). A man enters an IT-workspace holding a golf club (18:34). He takes off his jacket and start explaining about television-sets (18:47). He portrays the newest features of the RCA Victor Black and White television chassis (19:33). Using one mirror which distorts the reflection and one regular mirror, he explains the TV-feature called a horizontal balanced phase detector (19:45). He describes the yoke guard which makes for an undistorted picture (20:34), followed by the TV signal guide tuner (21:05), the 20,000-volt TV-receiver (21:55), and the high-contrast and clarity controls (23:23), the automatic channel equalizer, also known as AGC (25:06), the serviceguard chemical fuse (26:28), the duo cone speaker (29:22), the security sealed circuits tested against vibrations and moisture (29:45), and the epoxy coated capacitors for longevity (31:30). He concludes the commercial by encouraging buyers for the black and white television receiver chassis (32:27).
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30 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 576   
@larrypatterson5363
@larrypatterson5363 Год назад
63 years later, and there’s STILL nothing to watch on TV!!!
@stephendacey8761
@stephendacey8761 Год назад
Plenty of reality T.V. like Big Brother or life with The Osbornes, Kardashians, or Jenners, etc.
@larrypatterson5363
@larrypatterson5363 Год назад
@@stephendacey8761 why watch other people live their life of privilege when you can live your own life?
@stephendacey8761
@stephendacey8761 Год назад
@@larrypatterson5363 I never said I watched it. It's just on many channels.I wouldn't watch that made up trash.
@larrypatterson5363
@larrypatterson5363 Год назад
@@stephendacey8761 Exactly! I never realized how “scripted” reality TV was until a family member was on a show for two or three episodes. It’s all layed out for the contestants/participants to follow. Very fake.
@activelow9297
@activelow9297 Год назад
@@larrypatterson5363 Lots of things to watch on TV if you're a simpleton.
@sugarplum5824
@sugarplum5824 Год назад
I remember, as a little girl, going with my dad to buy new TV tubes. The store also had a tube tester to ensure they were all in good working order. Televisions were a big ticket item for middle class families and would last 20 years; some even longer. The entirety of my time living at home, we only bought a new TV once and that was to "invest" in a color set. My folks let me put the "old" black and white TV in my bedroom. We got 4 channels and had to *(gasp)* walk across the room to turn the TV on and off or to change the channel.
@larrypatterson5363
@larrypatterson5363 Год назад
My grandfather gave his old upright b & w set to my father after getting a color set. Soon my father followed suit and sent the set to the basement as a set for “the kids to watch”. That 17” b & w Sylvania upright was a beautiful piece of furniture! So much so, that I took it to college with me, and after my roommate & I got bunk beds to free up floor space in our doom room, we became a huge hit on the floor! Soon EVERYONE was in our room, and it was ‘party central’ constantly! It was a great set (although no remote)! I remember watching the entire first 3 seasons of SNL on that set. The sound and picture quality were both very crisp & sharp! After college, the set made its way back to the basement until my folks sold the family homestead in 1997, and the pristine working set was then given away to someone else. Now try and get 35+ years out of a TV set today!!!
@stephendacey8761
@stephendacey8761 Год назад
I actually stopped watching B&W T.V. as late as 1987. People still watched B&W throughout the 80's. But, the 90's were color T.V.'s only.
@mollybell5779
@mollybell5779 Год назад
Lol, I could have written the exact same reply as yours, word for word. 😁
@larrypatterson5363
@larrypatterson5363 Год назад
@@stephendacey8761 very true. It was difficult to even find one during the ‘Great Cable-ization’ period of America. By the 2000’s, the commies convinced Congress to abandon terrestrial TV for satellite TV only, and then analog for digital, and made the government PAY for it! LOL! The government then gave everyone a free descrambler and $40 to watch TV with an old set (color or b&w)
@Tenderbits
@Tenderbits Год назад
I’m 40, and my experience wasn’t any different with the exception that we had a color TV always. But, we still didn’t have any remotes. I was the remote.
@lowerclassbrats77
@lowerclassbrats77 Год назад
Back when a television wasn't just a television, it was often furniture as well.
@philipinchina
@philipinchina Год назад
They were so big they had to be.
@billtomson5791
@billtomson5791 Год назад
And QUITE heavy.
@joshacollins84
@joshacollins84 Год назад
And they were considered durable goods, that could be serviced.
@Iridium43
@Iridium43 Год назад
If not for the television it was block of junk on the floor.
@ChatGPT1111
@ChatGPT1111 Год назад
The best ones let you store your whiskey in alpabetical order!
@markiobook8639
@markiobook8639 Год назад
I love these old documentaries. So much knowledge imparted simply and without dumbing it down.
@stanleydenning
@stanleydenning Год назад
My Dad was a TV repairman from 1950 to 1981. RCA/Victor was his favorite brand to work on.
@AlRoblesTV
@AlRoblesTV Год назад
RCA/Victor later became JVC Victor Company of Japan
@eminence_front6043
@eminence_front6043 Год назад
Zenith was my favorite brand to service.
@wargeocarl
@wargeocarl Год назад
My dad was also a t.v. repair man in the early 50s. I remember going with him on a few service calls. The bulk of the repairs would be testing and replacing weak or defective tubes.
@lawrencelobo9766
@lawrencelobo9766 Год назад
I too repaired right from Valve , Transistor, IC's, and now SMD.
@60gregma
@60gregma 3 месяца назад
I would image he did. They were always breaking down.
@MrTruckerf
@MrTruckerf Год назад
I am 72 years old and had no idea they had that kind of stuff in 1960! We got our first color set around 1965 but never got one with a remote for many years after that. It used to be a $100 extra to get a remote.
@jaf8771
@jaf8771 Год назад
I'm 72 years old as well. We got our first color tv in 1965...although, it was a used set. We were thrilled! We couldn't afford a new one and a remote was not even thought of in my family. The television sets they show in this video were for rich people.
@JohnBGood-kq3ul
@JohnBGood-kq3ul Год назад
We got our first color TV in the early 60's also, and I remember after it was delivered, we had to wait until a serviceman came to "set it up". Anyone else have to do that or was that a gimmick for the store to make extra $?
@jaf8771
@jaf8771 Год назад
@@JohnBGood-kq3ul Our service man set-it-up because he wanted to show us how to use the features, such as how to adjust the color, tint, etc. It was such an event to see color tv for the first time and it opened up a whole new horizon..."In living color"!!
@dieseldragon6756
@dieseldragon6756 Год назад
In the UK, we had a somewhat different approach to remote controls: You'd simply order your youngest son or daughter to get up and adjust the channel/volume/power on-off manually. The effect this had on me is that I'm so used to operating the controls _on_ a device that the only time I use remote controls is when I'm at a friends place. 🙂 I can say this: As a way of keeping activity up and weight down, it certainly has its merits! 😀
@eminence_front6043
@eminence_front6043 Год назад
Bet they didn't sell that many of them because I never saw one either.
@calbob750
@calbob750 Год назад
Back in the good old days your TV set had more than a picture tube. It had tubes that controlled horizontal, vertical, brightness , etc. Local drug stores sold TV tubes and had a tube tester. When your set’s picture went bad you took the suspect vacuum tubes with you and tested them on the tube tester. Then you picked a replacement from the ones stocked in the tube tester.
@waldo1967
@waldo1967 Год назад
RCA had divisions in Indianapolis and Bloomington, Indiana. The company I worked for at the time molded the plastic trim bezels that went around the tube on the RCA console models. Eventually, consoles fell out of popularity. They packed up and moved what was left to Mexico in the 90s. Today, RCA exists as a brand name only.
@kennixox262
@kennixox262 Год назад
As you probably know, RCA was sold to Thompson Electronics in 1989. The final nail for RCA was their foray into the CED video disk which was a major flop. Other money losers was the foray into mainframe computers and other products. I have an RCA branded antenna, probably made in China. Works well. Too bad there is nothing to watch on television in 2023.
@MrTruckerf
@MrTruckerf Год назад
@@kennixox262 I actually watch many of the same shows I saw back in the late-'50s - '60s. Retro-TV. The current stuff is pretty much garbage.
@harleypattersonkc9gld167
@harleypattersonkc9gld167 Год назад
Yes, they were making tv's here in Indianapolis before there was a tv station here ...
@albertpatterson3675
@albertpatterson3675 Год назад
The first color program that I can remember was "Bonanza" with a map set ablaze, but only after "the following program is brought to in living color on NBC" followed by the peacock.
@MrTruckerf
@MrTruckerf Год назад
I remember the NBC announcement. The first show I remember in color was 'Family Affair' with its awesomely colorful beginning. After having watched in B&W for many years, to see the same things in color almost made one cry with delight!
@johnhouston9764
@johnhouston9764 Год назад
I remember that catch phrase.
@johnfalstaff2270
@johnfalstaff2270 Год назад
I am sure you missed Zorro with Guy Williams.
@tvoftomorrow
@tvoftomorrow Год назад
Thanks for posting this. I’m obsessed with early television stuff. If you have any more, I would really love to know, please. I appreciate the fact that you take care of all of these wonderful films.
@DM-dx4nq
@DM-dx4nq Год назад
Internet archive has a lot of such videos. Without ad and stupid subtitles from periscopfilm
@HandyAndyTechTips
@HandyAndyTechTips Год назад
That "programmer with the magic memory" is actually a really cool idea. I can only imagine the amount of electromechanical complexity that would have gone into it - no ICs or processors back then!
@Tiqerboy
@Tiqerboy Год назад
It must have never sold well. I've never seen a television with it, not even in an antique shop. This film suggests the value is that you don't have to get out of your chair to change the channel but the real value is, having the TV turn automatically on so that you don't miss your show, when you've lost track of time. That I can see being worthwhile back then. I counted 24 buttons across the bottom so it handles a 12 hr out of the day. Cartoons probably started at 8am on Saturday mornings and the news was on at 11pm. So I wonder if you could decide on the 12 hr window of operation.
@cynthiaclarke3979
@cynthiaclarke3979 Год назад
We got our first color TV in 1967 and remembered it cost almost a thousand dollars for a 27 inch tv,am-fm and phonograph record player..
@oldradiosnphonographs
@oldradiosnphonographs Год назад
Was it a Sylvania, Zenith, or magnavox?
@cynthiaclarke3979
@cynthiaclarke3979 Год назад
@@oldradiosnphonographs- 27" RCA..it was a returned model they had marked down to get rid of..when the picture tube went out 4 or 5 years later..the only thing that worked was the phonograph and am-fm radio..it had it's fair share of cigarette burns on the top and rings from wet drinks placed on it.
@oldradiosnphonographs
@oldradiosnphonographs Год назад
@@cynthiaclarke3979 I assume your family kept it just for stereo use? Sylvania about 1968 or so made a TV with a slide projector built in! These must be extremely rare sets today. It would be cool to see Shango066 fix one of those!
@bobwilson758
@bobwilson758 Год назад
Magic memory …. Wow , I could sure use that function these days !
@larrypatterson5363
@larrypatterson5363 Год назад
Magic memory-back when daily newspapers used to publish tv and radio guides!
@ChatGPT1111
@ChatGPT1111 Год назад
I heard they weren't bought and paid for by the chicomms back then too.
@trevordance5181
@trevordance5181 Год назад
Daily newspapers in the UK still list tv and radio programme schedules
@johnmc3862
@johnmc3862 Год назад
They still do, just not in the Us it seems.
@terrycollins5120
@terrycollins5120 Год назад
My goodness!! I'm watching this old promotion film on early color and black and white television on my tablet.
@alphonsocarioti512
@alphonsocarioti512 Год назад
It's always interesting to see early technology that slowly led up to the point we are at today. The evolution of electronics is wonderful in this video. Thanks!
@hebneh
@hebneh 10 месяцев назад
When this film was made in 1960, there were very few color programs on TV at all, since only NBC was doing any color broadcasting. And also at that time, every time a new color show came on, or you changed channels, you had to adjust the color and tint all over again.
@ohger1
@ohger1 Год назад
The programmable tuner is cool, but couldn't be used today - 6 minute commercial breaks means constant channel switching looking for something to watch.
@marktubeie07
@marktubeie07 Год назад
Salesmen are brilliant ! Amazing how a limitation of the NTSC color system is turned into a feature, that being the _'TINT'_ control. Fantastic time capsule video here👍
@hifijohn
@hifijohn Год назад
It was used all the time tint was all over the place back then, you were constantly turning the tint control to get a viewable picture.
@philippkemptner4604
@philippkemptner4604 Год назад
It woukd be rude to post "laughs in PAL" ;) :D
@arthurharrison1345
@arthurharrison1345 Год назад
"NTSC" means "Never Twice the Same Colors."
@elvisonwax
@elvisonwax Год назад
It’s worth remembering that RCA Victor not only made TVs and radios. RCA was one of the world’s biggest record companies who signed many great artists including Harry Belafonte, Henry Mancini, Paul Anka and Elvis Presley. In addition, they introduced the 45 rpm ‘single’ - an item which changed the world.
@JWimpy
@JWimpy Год назад
I love that folding Hillsborough tv set. That is beautiful even for today. Love to get my hands on one to restore.
@marcusvaughn7019
@marcusvaughn7019 Год назад
I'm absolutely amazed that this technology existed in the early 1960s. The first remote controlled TV set I ever observed was the first 5 minute plus scene on the "hippie" cult classic "Skiddo" with Carol Channing and Jackie Gleason, circa 1967/68. I was amazed and wanted one right away, until I saw the prices that remote controlled TV sets commanded. The first time I saw one in person was my new brother inlaw's set, in 1973. The style of the set was very modern, with a curved "mirrored" bottom base, and hip, space age design. I loved the remote, but as I was only 10 yrs old at the time, I rarely got to use it, unless I woke up before everyone else. As I recall, changing the channel was quite loud, with the manual switch on the set turning as the TV changed channels. My brother inlaw was pretty hip too, and he owned the first Atari, Pong game, as well as others, such as the WW1 fighter planes, and a few others I can't recall. This was circa 1977/78. The best my family could do was use the "clapper" until we finally purchased our own remote set around 1982. Thank you for this eye-opening glimpes into the super tech TV sets of the 1960s.
@donr.ontario
@donr.ontario Год назад
Great video. I worked for RCA Canada in the 70’s. The Canadian company was set up as a smaller version of the US company, and made TV’s, picture tubes, cabinets and almost everything else in local Canadian plants. There was even a research centre modelled on the US R&D division. As others have pointed out, RCA made a variety of strategic, product and leadership mistakes in the 60’s and 70’s that lead to their demise. GE, at the time, appeared to be a brilliantly run conglomerate, took over RCA and sold off the pieces they didn’t want. Which was most of the company. The Japanese were the also the big overseas competitors at the time. The result is that today RCA survives in name only on low priced imported products. Fun to see what was then cutting edge tech.
@stupidfluffy7308
@stupidfluffy7308 Год назад
Would someone ask the Hillsborough Housewife where she got those sparkly curtains? Those curtains are purtyyyy.
@drh4683
@drh4683 Год назад
Continuously variable volume control was a legitimate and important sales claim for remote control in this era as RCA provided a more expensive remote motor drive to turn the volume control as if you were to manually turn the control at the TV itself. The competition brands of the era often used a less expensive stepper relay in the remote control circuit to control volume in only 3 increments, a "low, medium, and high" and this relay was in series with the manual volume control on the TV, thus you really couldn't "dial in" that perfect volume with the remote as you could with RCA.
@steveb9151
@steveb9151 Год назад
29:04 I remember that when Dad would use his electric shaver, the TV reception went all wonky.
@cynthiaclarke3979
@cynthiaclarke3979 Год назад
We went wonky when the TV got turned off at 8pm because we had to go to bed for school in the morning..Friday and Saturday night was 10pm..
@wetcanoedogs
@wetcanoedogs Год назад
dads electric carving knife was a major wonk.
@tubular618
@tubular618 Год назад
vacuum cleaners and hair dryers were the worst.
@steveb9151
@steveb9151 Год назад
@@tubular618 Amen!
@cynthiaclarke3979
@cynthiaclarke3979 Год назад
@@tubular618- Don't forget the mixer when it came time to bake a cake or real lumpy mashed potatoes..I missed home made cooking.
@SteadySteve1024
@SteadySteve1024 Год назад
RCA VICTOR. I remember when RCA meant something and it was built to last. They can make stuff to last a lot longer than it does but why would they. Imagine the money they would lose if you didn't have to buy it again in a few year's.
@rambojambone4586
@rambojambone4586 Год назад
I want a Hillsboro !”
@ohger1
@ohger1 Год назад
16:52 oops, reversed the tuner and speaker connections.. LOL
@oldradiotvsc9836
@oldradiotvsc9836 Год назад
Yes, interesting how he said speaker leads, but he was actually attaching antenna leads to the tuner.
@tinytonymaloney7832
@tinytonymaloney7832 Год назад
Oh no... My child saw this guy smoking on TV... now he is going to become a chain smoker. There should have been pre-warnings before so that Ican turn the TV off to protect my child. Now I'll have to take him to a child psychologist that specialises in snowflakes 😂😂😂
@joeguzman3558
@joeguzman3558 Год назад
We didn't have a remote control TV until 1974 or so , I remember when the first color TV come to our neighborhood only one family had it at first everyone else had black and white, today my 4 year old granddaughter tells me how to do something on my phone, I can only imagine what the next 100 years will bring.
@stefannichols4241
@stefannichols4241 Год назад
Until sometime in the 1980s when we got a new color tv with remote control, I acted as the remote. My dad would have me sit near to change channel and volume.
@johncornell3665
@johncornell3665 Год назад
Such a simpler time. Everything built to last!
@stephendacey8761
@stephendacey8761 Год назад
until the picture tube blows.
@jaredevildog6343
@jaredevildog6343 Год назад
Unlike today. Everything built to break.
@lowerclassbrats77
@lowerclassbrats77 Год назад
@@stephendacey8761 Back then you would have a television repaired as opposed to today where people throw it out and buy a new one.
@defresurrection
@defresurrection Год назад
I witnessed the time when tv repair came to your house. I witnessed the death of the TV repair industry. I witnessed the repair of TV components, to the replacement of horizontal, vertical etc circuit boards. Bad resistor, throw a board at it.
@defresurrection
@defresurrection Год назад
@@lowerclassbrats77 yes! Replacement in my house was a stone cold dead issue. House call, repair cheaper.
@robertwest3093
@robertwest3093 Год назад
I always liked how the music in these old films sounds like they can't control the volume going up and down.
@audvidgeek
@audvidgeek Год назад
automatic "ducker" circuits and dynamic range compression didn't exist back then. One had to manually adjust the level on an audio mixer when the narration speech started
@stevef6392
@stevef6392 Год назад
Oh man, RCA totally should've motorized the Hillsborough! Bob would've been like, WHUH-HO!! DUDE! And Bill would've been like, "This... is not designed with the serviceman in mind."
@GalvestonGuy
@GalvestonGuy Год назад
I miss those days!
@2W3X4YZ5
@2W3X4YZ5 Год назад
These videos are so much nicer than “match your mood” from Westinghouse, and “time out for trouble.”
@barto4678
@barto4678 Год назад
We never even had a color TV until the mid-70s
@jassenjj
@jassenjj Год назад
I've never seen a TV as the one @7:40, although I follow quite a lot restoration channels...
@Sashazur
@Sashazur Год назад
My grandparents back in the 60s or 70s had a TV with some kind of wireless mechanical remote that didn’t need batteries, you could kind of see though the mesh in the front and it looked like it had metal rods inside. It took some effort to press the buttons and they made a very loud CLICK with a little vibration to it. I think all it could do was on/off, volume and channel up/down.
@oldradiotvsc9836
@oldradiotvsc9836 Год назад
Yes, the way these types of remotes worked was that those rods were different sizes, and when pressing different buttons, it made hammers strike the particular rod associated with that button for that function. Different rods produced different frequencies (pitches) of sound, often above the human hearing range, and the remote receiver inside the TV would recognize the frequency of the sound to activate that function- such as channel change, volume up or down, or on/off.
@Sashazur
@Sashazur Год назад
@@oldradiotvsc9836 Cool! So it was ultrasonic I guess. Very clever.
@notyouraccount566
@notyouraccount566 Год назад
We had one and we called it the clicker not remote
@pcno2832
@pcno2832 Год назад
We weren't allowed to use our Zenith Space Command 300 remote control; my mother said she was worried we'd break it. Then one day, when my parents were away, my sister was using the remote and saw the car pull up, so she slammed it onto "Z" emblem that normally held it and it shattered into a million pieces. My mother acted angry, but she later admitted that she was glad to see it gone and only stopped us from using it because she couldn't stand the noise from the channels changing.
@JohnBGood-kq3ul
@JohnBGood-kq3ul Год назад
@@notyouraccount566 We still do.
@friendofdorothy9376
@friendofdorothy9376 Год назад
That was fun to watch. That first color TV with the multi-function remote was really something. I read that most people used the one button to just turn off the picture, and they often would not keep holding it to turn off the whole set. So the TV would be “off” but really the set was left on and they would sometimes overheat and cause a fire. I have one of those hideaway Hillsborough TV’s…got it off eBay about 4 years ago. This is the first video I’ve seen of its commercial with the sound, so that was great. The one I have needs a new picture tube I was told, and I’m not sure what shape the chassis is in? The wood finish has some paint speckles on it but is generally in good shape. Very cool design. The last man kept saying shassis, hehe. Sometime in the early to mid 60s my family got a Magnavox entertainment center, with a big color picture tube and phonograph and AM/FM stereo radio. I do remember a man coming to the house to fix it occasionally. The remote for it had only two buttons, one to change the channel and one to change volume. When you pressed them they made a little burst of air sound, I think using ultrasonic frequencies. That’s all it did, not at all like that first remote that did everything. There was also a button on the TVs control panel you could press that would use a motor to change the channel selector and we kids would just push it and hold it so it would go ka-ching through every channel.
@MrTruckerf
@MrTruckerf Год назад
Wow, you guys must have been loaded! In about 1964 our rich cousins got a console TV like what you described except no remote. At the time it was 1/4 the price of a brand new Ford car. So TVs are comparatively far cheaper now than they were then.
@briangray5921
@briangray5921 Год назад
Back when we made things and everything made sense.
@stephendacey8761
@stephendacey8761 Год назад
Back when products were made in the U.S.A.
@peterd9427
@peterd9427 Год назад
Back when women knew their place, a black eye would teach them not to think too big, when whites and blacks couldn't marry, and gays were bashed and everybody got away with it. Such a great time!
@oldradiosnphonographs
@oldradiosnphonographs Год назад
@@peterd9427 the one thing that drives me crazy about the “good ol days” next to the things you mentioned, (Could be just my modern millennial mindset) is when women were referred to Mrs husband’s first and last name. not to mention women couldn’t have credit cards or open a bank account. I think gays were also referred to as “Confirmed Bachelors?”
@stockholm1752
@stockholm1752 Год назад
I’m sold. Does it come with Netflix?
@Censoredbyfscists
@Censoredbyfscists Год назад
Back in the days before tech melted our brains.
@BlueSkyScholar
@BlueSkyScholar Год назад
This button is the netflix button, the biggest button on the remote control, if you push it it will throw your TV into a tizzy of updates that it will never recover from.
@nandolopes9897
@nandolopes9897 Год назад
NTSC = Never The Same Color.
@davidbeard7262
@davidbeard7262 Год назад
Never Twice (The) Same Color.
@mollybell5779
@mollybell5779 Год назад
Lol you can turn the TV completely off with the remote control. Remarkable! 😂 I'm curious as to what percentage of TV shows were in color in 1960. Enjoyed this very much. 😁
@maples328
@maples328 Год назад
Not very many in color. BW tv 📺 outsold color into early 1970s. Only 2% of US homes 🏠 had a color tv in 1960
@rambojambone4586
@rambojambone4586 Год назад
Only NBC had color at first, as I remember. I bought a 19 inch color set; my first one, in 1976.
@rambojambone4586
@rambojambone4586 Год назад
Love the service guys. Today, we throw the tv set out. The service guys are all homeless.
@audvidgeek
@audvidgeek Год назад
many TV's had a mode, where it would turn off the sound and picture, but it would keep the tubes hot for an "instant on" the next time you wanted to watch it...sort of like a picture mute on a modern TV.
@pon2oon
@pon2oon Год назад
Ah, color tv back then! Much bulkier, and more expensive than we have now. With a much wider, stylistic array of real-wood-work-of-art cabinets, that qualify as unique and beautiful pieces of furniture, in the modern age. Each with it's own mesmerizing puzzle, of hand-wired, (lead-soldered) analog tube, complexities, is a brief age of the electron that hopefully will never disappear completely!
@Lion_McLionhead
@Lion_McLionhead Год назад
TV sales must have been sluggish to require playbook videos. Nowadays when sales get sluggish, it's time for an economic stimulus package.
@NashBrooklyn
@NashBrooklyn Год назад
quality of life at its best while population at its lowest -
@guitarcomet5
@guitarcomet5 Год назад
When I was 5 years old, we had a Zenith about like that. A bit larger wooden cabinet with a speaker in the bottom. There wasn’t a remote control. The antenna was struck by lightning and the TV never worked well after that. We spent several hundred dollars trying to fix it, too. 📺
@scottkasper6378
@scottkasper6378 Год назад
That sealed circuit board spelled the end of the tv serviceman job
@mikemiller659
@mikemiller659 Год назад
I was 5 years old. Color TV's were Expensive ..all the way through the 70's . $700.00 on UP.
@alphonsocarioti512
@alphonsocarioti512 Год назад
This is how couch potatoes were created.
@stephencooley5523
@stephencooley5523 Год назад
Humans are a lazy species. I mean we invented the train and the car so we don't have to walk. We invented the electric can opener when the manual can opener was doing the job of opening cans just fine all because putting in the effort of turning a can opener was just to much hard work. We as as species like to find ways to make life an little easier so we have more time to relax. I bet you have driven to the shops when you could just so have easily walked, I know I have. We are all couch potatoes really.
@fredbozo8488
@fredbozo8488 Год назад
The dark haired salesman who didn’t know squat about TV innards in one short returns in another as an overtly know-it-all engineer - How can we know he’s not pulling the wool over our eyes??
@MrTruckerf
@MrTruckerf Год назад
I think it is safe to assume they are actors doing exactly what they are paid to do.
@audvidgeek
@audvidgeek Год назад
the technican taught him! LOL!
@Jacksn42
@Jacksn42 Год назад
@@MrTruckerf Really, captain obvious?
@bardo0007
@bardo0007 Год назад
Press this button! ................it turns off the picture.........................................................long break...... WOW it turned off the picture!
@mistergrandpasbakery9941
@mistergrandpasbakery9941 Год назад
Those capacitors were a giant leap forward in servicing TVs.
@rfjohns1
@rfjohns1 Год назад
What is that guy's accent? Does anyone today still talk have that accent I wonder?? Sounds like Burt Lancaster.
@Nunofurdambiznez
@Nunofurdambiznez Год назад
Peri - I know I say this all the time.. but, TRULY, this is one of your all-time BEST!!!
@larrypatterson5363
@larrypatterson5363 Год назад
Today, a lot of municipalities have an electronic pickup day where you can throw out old TV’s and PC’s. The dumps don’t want all that non-recyclable electronics in there.
@defresurrection
@defresurrection Год назад
Never realized the tech In the time-frame I was born. Even then, tech cost $$$. I was the Official Channel Changer. The remote back then was the size of a toaster. Lol
@aznboycols
@aznboycols Год назад
Back in '52, we had a Motorola. My dad drew a map of all of the tube's location and part number. If the tv didn't work, he'd look and the unlit tub was pulled out and he went to the store for a new one. Of course he checked the new and old tubes since a lot of stores had a tube checker for their customers.
@lelandfranklin3487
@lelandfranklin3487 Год назад
Ahhh....the "Sword Swallowing Show." Take THAT "Seinfeld!"
@cameron6249
@cameron6249 Год назад
that's it, i'm gonna start saving up for an rca victor!
@johnnytyrrell7060
@johnnytyrrell7060 Год назад
As a kid I was the Remote and told to get up and change the channels it was like that until the early 80s.
@Modeltnick
@Modeltnick Год назад
Earlier remote control worked off of a mechanical chime noise generator that made sounds that triggered the motor inside of the television set.
@theclearsounds3911
@theclearsounds3911 Год назад
I still have a couple of those remote controls. A tiny hammer banged on a metal cylinder that was tuned like a bell for a certain high pitched sound frequency, and a microphone in the TV connected to some tuned circuits sensed which button was pressed. It was so wonderful, until my mother swept the floor. The broom made a series of sounds on the same frequencies, so the TV went crazy! True story! 🤣
@Modeltnick
@Modeltnick Год назад
@@theclearsounds3911 Thanks for your response! It’s been a long time since I’ve seen on of those remote controls. They made a ping noise when you pressed the buttons and there was motor that turned the tuner. Great memories!
@theclearsounds3911
@theclearsounds3911 Год назад
@@Modeltnick Please forgive me for my long story. But, if you bought a TV used, and it had that kind of remote control, but the remote was missing, I discovered a way around it. For each function, if you went into your hardware junk box and dropped random washers into a glass baby food jar, you could recreate the same frequencies, and have yourself a free remote control! Very awkward changing the channels by shaking glass jars, though, but it worked!
@Modeltnick
@Modeltnick Год назад
@@theclearsounds3911 Very interesting! That system was short lived. Thanks!
@kennixox262
@kennixox262 Год назад
On the TV set with the programmable tuner: First, had never seen that and second, the picture tube is very "European" of the era to where the tube extended beyond the facia. American TV screens always seemed to behind the facia. I bet controlling and programming that with all the slide switches was a headache for many to operate compared to the turn-the-knobs of the time.
@erin19030
@erin19030 Год назад
Who the hell is the guy in the suit and tie working on a TV chassis?
@erin19030
@erin19030 Год назад
Quick where are my wellies the shite is getting deeper in here ! Lies, lies, lies, because the customer is too stupid to understand.
@erin19030
@erin19030 Год назад
Lies, lies lies! Hiw do you people sleep at night.
@erin19030
@erin19030 Год назад
Tell me WTF is a Shassie
@oldradiotvsc9836
@oldradiotvsc9836 Год назад
@@erin19030 A chassis is the framework of all the electronics inside the TV set to make it work.
@suzakule
@suzakule Год назад
This must be a VERY strange RCA TV if you hook the speaker up to the VHF 300 ohm dipole inputs! cone on RCA, you should know better! ref 33.09 timestamp.
@coloradostrong
@coloradostrong Год назад
Work on your timestamp, so people only have to touch the numbers, and then it takes them right to the spot you want them to see. Like this: ref 33:09 timestamp.
@MrTruckerf
@MrTruckerf Год назад
At the time not one person watching knew the difference. Or cared!
@tubular618
@tubular618 Год назад
These weren't promos or ads. They were to educate the salesmen with selling points.
@cameronlewis1218
@cameronlewis1218 Год назад
Omg, that thing at 6:45 looks like a coffin!
@WVgrl59
@WVgrl59 Год назад
I was born in '59, so I went through the black and white and color TVs but this remote would have been a nightmare for parents with school-age children. They might have even made the Munsters look normal with this remote. Lol
@joestrike8537
@joestrike8537 Год назад
It took me a solid year and a half of begging/pleading/noodging my folks to finally get a color set in 1966. They bought a 25" Zenith in an "Italian Provincial" cabinet. (Their pamphlet showed the same set in a dozen different furniture styles.)
@OldsVistaCruiser
@OldsVistaCruiser Год назад
My family didn't get color until their 1970 RCA 25" console, which gave our orange cat, Maggie, cancer from the excess radiation that it emitted. She liked to sleep on the top of its cabinet.
@pcno2832
@pcno2832 Год назад
It must have cost a fortune to inventory all those cabinet-style and equipment combinations. Then they had to do the same for console stereos. I never understood why they didn't sell the guts and cabinets separately, letting the dealers mix and match them. They could have designed them to have the same "custom fit" and it would have allowed carry-in service for customers willing to lug in a slide-out TV, receiver or turntable. Magnavox actually tried that with its consoles in the 1980s, but by that time they were in terminal decline. I suppose the "rack" systems of the 1990s were based on the same concept, but they didn't hide the components the way the consoles did.
@oldradiosnphonographs
@oldradiosnphonographs Год назад
That’s interesting I assume people have a “this TV works just fine.” Response.
@audvidgeek
@audvidgeek Год назад
@@pcno2832 They did that with some of the higher end stereos, like Fisher, Marantz, Pilot, Scott, etc. You could buy the style cabinet you wanted, then buy the components like the receiver, amp, turntable, and even add an open-reel tape deck if you wanted, and the types of speakers you wanted. The dealer would then assemble them and deliver it to your home. Very expensive compared to the mass-market brands like RCA, Zenith, etc. IIRC, I heard the RCA cabinets were made in North Carolina, then they were delivered flat-pack style to Bloomington Indiana, where they were assembled, and the electronics added, and then they were off to a dealer. They did have several different cabinet styles for the same (TV or stereo) chassis back then, but it wasn't something the dealer could easily swap for those brands, like you could for the higher end stereo systems.
@monaural2.988
@monaural2.988 Год назад
I really, really wish we could bring back the designs of the 1950s and 1960s, only with the modern technology we live with in 2023. Why can’t we have the TVs, Stereos and even Automobiles from then on the outside, new technology on the inside? Riddle me that, somebody!
@oldradiosnphonographs
@oldradiosnphonographs Год назад
I’ve seen ppl put Bluetooth in old console stereos
@JB-rt4mx
@JB-rt4mx Год назад
Back when Suits and Dress's were daily wear..
@jessejames586
@jessejames586 Год назад
We never had a color tv nor a remote control. Had to get up to change channels or adjust the antenna rotator.
@Thomas-yr9ln
@Thomas-yr9ln Год назад
They all got a great picture when they were new and the CRT was strong.
@moow950
@moow950 Год назад
Wow , a button to turn off the TV! Magic !!
@hymlog
@hymlog Год назад
....I'm going to get mine at Wally-World today!!
@zeliardforty-two4692
@zeliardforty-two4692 Год назад
I want one of those remotes! Something so retro you don’t see in ones today. Something we take for granted these days
@dathyr1
@dathyr1 Год назад
As the previous commenter said, 63 years later. Kind of wonder what will be the next big leap in TV's and controllers. I remember my parents having one of those Heavy Tube TV's. It wasn't that particular brand in the video. Now most of us have 40-60 inch lightweight flat screens sitting on a desk somewhere in the house. Interesting to remember seeing the old commercials of technology of the past.
@bertroost1675
@bertroost1675 Год назад
That sword swallower was getting on my nerves.
@renesagahon4477
@renesagahon4477 Год назад
My aunt had a full blown color TV set with remote back around 1960, . The thing cost almost as much as a new car. Even then IF you had a color set. Very few programs were broadcast in color
@MicheIIePucca
@MicheIIePucca Год назад
Wow.. color tv in 1960.. we never received a color TV until 1975, and no remote on that one.. we had to actually get off our bums and walk to the tv to change the channel or volume.
@oldradiosnphonographs
@oldradiosnphonographs Год назад
The switch from black and white to color seemed more gradual…I get the mindset of the time was “this TV works just fine. Why do I need to spend $400 in 1960s money for color?” Since people buying the sets lived through the Great Depression and WWII where you didn’t willy nilly throw things away.
@MicheIIePucca
@MicheIIePucca Год назад
@@oldradiosnphonographs I think for us it was that I came from a single income home, with 9 kids. No one could afford a color TV. My parents never had a B/W TV until the early 60s either. It was a matter of priorities.. get a tv or feed the kids :)
@stevengill1736
@stevengill1736 Год назад
Dick Tracy cartoons back then had a future watch that could video conference, and now I'm seeing this on a smartphone not much bigger than Dick Tracy's fictional watch!
@stephencooley5523
@stephencooley5523 Год назад
You could watch this and then make a video call on your smartwatch in 2023. Dick Tracy got what we would be doing with are watches in the future 100 percent right.
@ShortBusScotty
@ShortBusScotty Год назад
WOW! Got a color TV, RCA Victor color TV. Everybody sing along...
@juliangerardcascio1111
@juliangerardcascio1111 Год назад
Zenith TV 📺 was the best 👌 👍 1 could ever get , we had good 👍 Luck with them !!!!
@BlondieSL
@BlondieSL Год назад
Yes, Zenith was excellent and of top quality. I was an RCA dealer, but not a Zenith dealer, sadly. But I did repair a lot of Zenith TVs. They were a pleasure and satisfying to work on. One problem that was common with Zeniths (others too, but moreso on Zenith) was that their CRTs got cataracts and in those days, it meant replacing the CRT. At that time, no repair shop that I ever knew would try to remove the protective, this front glass, cleaning up and re-applying the material to join the safety glass to the tube itself. Nope, we never did that. LOL
@glennjones6574
@glennjones6574 Год назад
The sword swallowing is a turn off. Lol
@rayjames6096
@rayjames6096 Год назад
What will they think of next...😃
@bobwilson758
@bobwilson758 Год назад
Sweet set ! I will take it , beautiful .
@JohnBGood-kq3ul
@JohnBGood-kq3ul Год назад
I emember how disappointed we were when the TV went "on the blink", then how glad we were when the TV repairman came to fix it, then how terrible we felt when he said he had to take the chassis to the shop for repair.
@relathan1
@relathan1 Год назад
How many of YOU were the "remote" for your father?
@oldradiotvsc9836
@oldradiotvsc9836 Год назад
True, many of us were!! I grew up with a mid 1960s RCA color round tube set that lasted until around 1980!
@oldradiosnphonographs
@oldradiosnphonographs Год назад
@@oldradiotvsc9836 and it was cheaper in those days to have your set repaired than buy a new one when something went wrong. How many times do you remember it being repaired?
@johnmc3862
@johnmc3862 Год назад
The remote control must have felt futuristic. Able to control something wirelessly in your own home.
@anthonybelyea1964
@anthonybelyea1964 Год назад
Most people didn't have colour TVs until the 1970s or remote controls until the 1980s soda have a colour TV remote control in 1960 it's probably pretty rare
@suhailwajid5040
@suhailwajid5040 Год назад
Nice. memories rewinder video
@miskatonicalumni5612
@miskatonicalumni5612 Год назад
Remotes still had cables when I was a kid, which was odd because it was the 1980s.
@pcno2832
@pcno2832 Год назад
I remember some VCRs with cabled remotes, and a few stereo receivers. I don't remember any cabled remotes on TVs here in the USA, but they might have been around; most of the major TV makers were probably worried someone would use the remote in the tub.
@kennethhall289
@kennethhall289 Год назад
Bell Labs, IBM, RCA all had entire armies of engineers and scientists working on improving the technology we consider almost ancient today.
@eddiejones.redvees
@eddiejones.redvees Год назад
My friends dad Rented an old black-and-white TV for years then when colour TVs came out in the UK he always Bought British so it was a brand new colour HMV tv he got two months after the guarantee was up it stopped working when the repair man came out it was Unrepairable he told him he should have got a Japanese one because they are much more reliable also in the UK we only call the picture tube a tube the rest area called valves
@MrTruckerf
@MrTruckerf Год назад
Very interesting peek at what it was like in the UK back then. I have never heard of renting a TV before! Thank you, Eddie!
@erin19030
@erin19030 Год назад
Magic programmer when there were only 4 channels.
@OldsVistaCruiser
@OldsVistaCruiser Год назад
The TV frequency band only had 12 channels (2-13). UHF came along a few years later with channels 14-82, later cut to Channel 69.
@TOONMAN200
@TOONMAN200 Год назад
Woops yes our I remember the fires, the feature turns off the picture will mistakenly forget to turn off the set, and people leave the room or the home with those hot tubes still burning inside the TV. After all the fire claims they did fix it so the button turned off the TV completely instead of just the picture, but that's really technology.
@bobd9868
@bobd9868 Год назад
Yep, and then it took forever for the set to warm up and the picture slowly emerged
@RCALivingStereo
@RCALivingStereo Год назад
Perfect! I’ve seen bits a pieces and clips of these info series they had And just saw you listed these a few days ago! Thank you I just subscribed to!
@cyrysvonnachtseite4546
@cyrysvonnachtseite4546 Год назад
That’s when RCA was a quality product. In the later 80s on up. RCA meant Really Crappy Apparatus
@BlondieSL
@BlondieSL Год назад
Oh you got that right! I used to be an RCA dealer and was proud of the quality of the products RCA made. Their color TVs were amazing and had amazing color. But, they started to get parts made off shore. They used to make their own color picture tubes, which where excellent. They often last 10 plus years. Often 20 or more. Of course, some of those round tube original color sets still work and some have their CRTs still in good condition after all these years. Then, they stopped and got their CRTs from "other" countries. That's when the quality went down fast! The CRTs couldn't produce the amazing color that RCA was famous for and good luck on a CRT last 3-5 years at best. Fortunately, I changed careers and followed a totally different course of life. I'm glad that I did. But I still have some pretty cool memories of those days long gone.
@cyrysvonnachtseite4546
@cyrysvonnachtseite4546 Год назад
@@BlondieSL I was a sworn Zenith man. Had great color. The company would honor the CRTs past warranty and you could rejuvenate them when the tube was starting to darken. I also restored in my time the magnavox/ Sylvania home console tv radio tape player combos. Many had the lifetime warranty on the CRT these were from the later 60s to mid 70s and NAP in the mid to later 90s would send me a new tube. They had the insta start picture. The tubes would stay on standby. Yup. Those were the days of TVs
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