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Television of the Day - April 3, 2008.

Mycroft Holmes

One of the Regulars
Messages
114
Location
Houston TX
Fisher-Good-03-01-1940-78-thumb.jpg


"TELECASTING TOMORROW ... TODAY!"

Good Housekeeping; March 1940.

Click here to view a full-size readable image.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,768
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
That's an RCA Victor TRK-12, from the looks of it -- the top of the line RCA television for 1939-40. It had a 12-inch screen, but the picture tube was so long it had to be mounted vertically in the cabinet -- thus the mirror in the lid which reflected the image from below.

Estes-RCATRK.jpg


This is also the most common surviving US prewar television set, "common" being a relative term of course. Surviving examples usually sell in the $6000-$10,000 range.
 

scotrace

Head Bartender
Staff member
Messages
14,392
Location
Small Town Ohio, USA
Pardon my saying so, but that modern lass is a babe. :)


Mycroft Holmes, all the images are very cool - we'd love to have your own comments and contributions now and again, as well.
 

Flivver

Practically Family
Messages
821
Location
New England
LizzieMaine said:
That's an RCA Victor TRK-12, from the looks of it -- the top of the line RCA television for 1939-40. It had a 12-inch screen, but the picture tube was so long it had to be mounted vertically in the cabinet -- thus the mirror in the lid which reflected the image from below.

Estes-RCATRK.jpg


This is also the most common surviving US prewar television set, "common" being a relative term of course. Surviving examples usually sell in the $6000-$10,000 range.

I've wanted an RCA TRK-12 ever since I learned of their existence when I was a teen-ager. With what they're worth today, I don't think it will ever happen!

But, one of my friends *does* own one...and it works too. He bought it off the curb on the old "Radio Row" in New York for $25 in 1954. When he demonstrates it, he feeds vintage programming into it with a VCR.
 

ScionPI2005

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,335
Location
Seattle, Washington
LizzieMaine said:
That's an RCA Victor TRK-12, from the looks of it -- the top of the line RCA television for 1939-40. It had a 12-inch screen, but the picture tube was so long it had to be mounted vertically in the cabinet -- thus the mirror in the lid which reflected the image from below.

Estes-RCATRK.jpg


This is also the most common surviving US prewar television set, "common" being a relative term of course. Surviving examples usually sell in the $6000-$10,000 range.

This isn't the first of this type that I have seen. Sure is strange though to watch your television through a mirror. The design sure is interesting though.
 

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