It's a National AE-670 radio, dating from around 1960. It's got medium wave, and two short-wave bands, and a "gram" input.
It's also a basket-case! It's been dropped at some stage in it's life, the glass dial is broken, and case front is cracked, and the woodwork's in a bad way... let's see what we can do....
The chassis looks complete and largely un-molested.
Removal of the front panel knobs, and four screws underneath the cabinet allow easy withdrawal of the chassis. I also remove the speaker board, and the damaged dial glass. A Piece of veneer on the front comes away when I remove the surround. I'll glue this back later.
On this inside of the cabinet, there's a circuit diagram, layout and re-stringing information. Something looks to have eaten it a bit!
The valve line up is 6X4 rectifier, 6AR5 output, 6BE6 frequency changer, 6BA6 IF amp, and a 6AV6 AGC, detector and 1st audio amp. There;s also a 6DA5 indicator tube.
The circuit will come in handy later...
The chassis has quite a few waxy capacitors, which will need replacement. There's also a 3uF 300V electrolytic which is probably past it's prime!
The main smoothing can is something else... look at all those sections!
After a few cursory checks to the mains and output transformers to check they're not open-circuit, I change all the waxy capacitors for modern equivalents.
There are a couple of wax caps I can't change. They are C50, a 0.003uF and C29, a 0.05uF.
These need to be modern safety components.
C29 must be X2 rated, as it's connected across the mains. C50 must be Y rated as it's between the mains and chassis. If C50 were to fail short-circuit, our chassis would become live. Not good.
I've ordered the X2 and Y rated caps, but for now the set will function without, so the wax capacitors are simply snipped out.
You can also see the chassis has a mains transformer, so is an isolated design, unlike many British sets of the time.
I gently bring the mains up via a variac and isolation transformer, monitoring the HT as I gently wind up the voltage. This allows the electrolytic capacitors to reform.
The main multi-section electolytic shows no rise in temperature, and is pronounced fit. The small 3uF cap is not in such good condition, and is replaced.
The set performs well, although the indicator is a bit dim... they never seem to be very bright thesedays...
I leave the set on soak test once I'm happy with it, and set about the cabinet.
The dial back, escutcheon and knobs get a good wash in the sink...
Where the front panel is damaged and de-laminating it's glued back together with PVA glue. The missing piece of lamination is made up with pieces of paper and glue, a bit like decoupage, until it's level. If I don't do this, the replacement speaker cloth will never sit straight.
The centre rib has been pushed in. It's repaired and glued. The croc clips will hold it all in place until the glue dries.
The speaker cone is ripped. It's been glued in the past, but has really had it. I'll get a replacement.
And on to the case...
The years have not been kind...
.... and the deeper scratches filled with some fine wood filler.
Now to don a dust mask, and rub the thing down....
Looks good eh? Now to stain the wood again...
First off hoover up all the dust left from the sanding, and wipe the cabinet over with a tack-wipe.
Now, I must admit I bought this stuff ~10 years ago to paint a front door with... came out nicely too. There's still a good 3/4 of a tin left...
Now...
Step 1. Read the instructions on the tin.
Step 2. Ignore the instructions on the tin!
Now that's looking good. If you want to go darker, just add another coat or two, until you get to the shade you're happy with. As it is, I think just the one coat is about right. You'll notice it's not too shiny. The woodstain gives us a satin finish, I intend to add a gloss varnish when I'm done...
I'm rather pleased...
During all the cabinet work, I had a thought... Gram input. Be nice if it was bluetooth....
There's precious little on MW and SW these days, and this would give the receiver a bit of a lift!!
Enter the BK8000L bluetooth module and adaptor board.
The module's left and right output "positive" outputs are coupled together via two 0.1uF capacitors, and the signal fed into the gram socket.
It works really well :)
And the radio reception isn't affected by it either!
The speaker board gets a nice piece of blue cloth glued, clamped and clipped into place....
... groovy ....
The hole where the magic eye pokes through is given a coat of PVA glue. This will make it stiffer, and easier to cut. It'll also stop it from sagging after I've cut it.
It's left to dry.
Meanwhile, the X2 and Y class safety capacitors have arrived......
... and are duly fitted.
The rubber grommets are removed from abound the holes for the control shafts, as they've gone hard and have shrunk. I'll find some new ones...
But what to do about the broken glass? I've had very little success over the years attempting to glue it. Superglue is just too brittle. Epoxy works, but has to applied thickly to get it to stick and the results are generally not nice to look at.
Further research show people have been using it to repair broken and cracked mobile phone digitisers, as a sort of stop-gap repair.
What have I got to lose?
It allegedly cures in 5 seconds...
I'm sceptical...
... but it works superbly!
Where the glue ran out of the join when I put the two halves together, there's a bit of a bead, which is very slightly soft. The packet says the stuff can be shaped, sanded, drilled, polished and painted... so I clean up the surface with a bit of wire wool.
I repaint the rear of the dial, where it's supposed to be opaque, with some black paint, as some of this was damaged when the glass was broken.
At this point, the dial breaks again, in the middle of the "V" ... there was a hairline crack there before... It again glues well...

I'm lucky enough to have a branch of Halfords locally, so I popped down, and picked one up...
It's a similar size, and 4 ohms... near enough. Notice on the label it states "Min. Input 20 watts" .. I've only got 4 or 5 .... I'm sure they don't mean that really ..... only one way to find out!
The bluetooth receiver is glued to the bottom of the cabinet.
... the back replaced, and it's given a thorough testing. The "min 20 watts" label on the speaker proves to be meaningless, as I thought.....
Extremely interesting and entertaining. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteIf your friend would like a new magic eye for his radio you could go try a Soviet or Chinese substitute, though I'm not sure whether those are the same as an EM80 or an EM81. If he wants to get a reproduction dial made there is a antique radio supplier in the U.S called "Radio Daze" that can reproduce them, but it probably would be in the $50-$60 US dollar range. They also sell reproduction speaker grill cloth, but I have seen repro cloth available elsewhere for Phillips and German radios of the same era from an outfit in Holland I think.
ReplyDeleteAs you have probably figured out this was a Japanese import radio manufactured by Matsushita. Matsushita used to marked radios under the "National Radio" brand everywhere but in the U.S and Canada due to the presence of "The National Compandy" of Malden, Massachusetts, a maker of communications receivers, parts, and other radio equipment.