LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,763
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
"Other than that, though, it's a mircale plastic!"
There were a lot of self-destructing plastics during the early phase of their development. Celluloid was always prone to decomposition, spelling the doom of everything from colorful dice to dresser sets. And then there's tenite -- another material popular with radio manfuacturers in the prewar era. Tenite was a Kodak product, originally developed for inexpensive camera bodies, but the radio people loved it because it could be used to make interesting "swirl effect" dial bezels and translucent knobs. RCA and Philco used the material heavily during the 1938-42 era -- pretty much every better RCA Victor set used a tenite bezel, and when Philco began using push-button tuning on its sets the buttons were tenite. And away from the radio business, the first View-Masters were made of tenite.
Tenite shrinks and warps with age, and this is accelerated by heat. As soon as any tenite product goes into an attic, it's doomed. There are untold numbers of really fine RCA radios that will never be restored because their tenite bezels are ruined and nobody makes a repro replacement. It's not as well-publicized problem as the Catalin issue, but if anything it's far more prevalent.
Some years ago, a neighbor gave me a 1938 RCA console which was stored well, and then "restored" some time in the 1960s by being glopped over with a thick layer of "antiquing paint." That paint was indescribably ugly -- but it did protect the bezel, and when I cleaned it off I was amazed to see that it didn't have a crack in it. It's the only intact tenite RCA bezel I've ever seen. That radio is now in my office, and I'm listening to it right now.
There were a lot of self-destructing plastics during the early phase of their development. Celluloid was always prone to decomposition, spelling the doom of everything from colorful dice to dresser sets. And then there's tenite -- another material popular with radio manfuacturers in the prewar era. Tenite was a Kodak product, originally developed for inexpensive camera bodies, but the radio people loved it because it could be used to make interesting "swirl effect" dial bezels and translucent knobs. RCA and Philco used the material heavily during the 1938-42 era -- pretty much every better RCA Victor set used a tenite bezel, and when Philco began using push-button tuning on its sets the buttons were tenite. And away from the radio business, the first View-Masters were made of tenite.
Tenite shrinks and warps with age, and this is accelerated by heat. As soon as any tenite product goes into an attic, it's doomed. There are untold numbers of really fine RCA radios that will never be restored because their tenite bezels are ruined and nobody makes a repro replacement. It's not as well-publicized problem as the Catalin issue, but if anything it's far more prevalent.
Some years ago, a neighbor gave me a 1938 RCA console which was stored well, and then "restored" some time in the 1960s by being glopped over with a thick layer of "antiquing paint." That paint was indescribably ugly -- but it did protect the bezel, and when I cleaned it off I was amazed to see that it didn't have a crack in it. It's the only intact tenite RCA bezel I've ever seen. That radio is now in my office, and I'm listening to it right now.