I have all my little radios started again after their rest, with two that refused to cooperate. I have the console radios sorted. Now for the big things, the console stereos. First up was the Concert Grand, simply because it was in the right spot. I brought it up on the Variac and KAW. The filaments alone pull almost 250 watts, without the remote control chassis turned on. With the Variac wide open, line voltage at 119.8 volts, I finally got it up to 111 volts and about 377 watts, give or take. I had both treble channels, both bass channels after I tinkered with a 12AX7 in its dirty tube socket. The eye tube does nothing, it's always open. This condition was there before I shut the console down for two years. It sounds pretty good, I'll have to say. I have only run it with the tuner, since I don't have my CD's sorted yet. I believe it sounds better in the shop than it did at home in Missouri. I'll have a better idea when I get some decent music on it. It was really clean, surprisingly so. No real corrosion on the cad plating, it was still nice and shiny. I had to pull the back to retrieve the power cord and the input to the tape. Somebody asked about my "new and improved" backs that I have made for a couple of my stereos. Pictures here will show the difference between the new back for the CG and the original. I let this run about an hour and the PT wasn't even warm, at line voltage. The MPX works okay, it seems. Service on this will include the changer and finding out why the eye tube is dead in the tuner. And the tuner dial is not close to accurate. I need to sort that as well. The long silver box over the tuner power supply chassis is the MPX adapter. This is technically supposed to be mounted to the back. This make service on the console more difficult, a nightmare to be exact. I mounted the MPX in this location which works really nicely. And, since I'm still sorting and stashing things in the shop, there is a stack of 78's and a little fan on top of the cabinet that obviously doesn't belong there.
Where Are my manners? For those who may not be familiar with the vaunted Concert Grand, allow me to elaborate. This is a 1960 model 1ST800F "Magnificent" Magnavox "Concert Grand" console stereo. It features an AM-FM radio tuner, remote control, a four-speed record changer, with aux. tape inputs and outputs and external speaker connections. This particular example is equipped with a model 70-02-00 Multiplex Adapter (MPX) that decodes the stereo composite and separates it into the two channels. This device would have been an accessory, added aftermarket, since FM stereo broadcasts were not authorized until the middle of 1961. This stereo was built in Week 43 of 1959, per the various codes on components in the instrument. This stereo features Magnavox's "bi-amp" or split frequency stereo amplifiers. It has a total of 44 tubes, including the remote control and MPX. As you can see in the above pictures and text, it is an electric heater in operation. This would have been the top-of=the line stereo for Magnavox in 1960. Advertised as having "200 watts peak" output, 50 watts per channel constant output, this, also is a story for another time. This one has a cherry finish in the Provincial cabinet. I got this stereo in a haunted house in Fort Worth in 2014, a story for another time.
Referring to the picture directly below this text, the chassis on the left lower portion of the cabinet would be the Channel 2 amplifier. Actually two amplifiers in one, it features a treble amp and a bass amp, separate but in one chassis. There is a 12AX7 pre-amp and two 6V6GT tubes for the treble amp and a 12AX7 pre-amp and six 6V6GT tubes for the bass amp. Two 5U4 rectifiers complete the tube complement. Then, toward the middle, the long box at the top would be the two-tube Multiplex adapter laying on it's side. Under it is the one-tube tuner power supply, featuring a 5Y3GT tube. Behind that, unseen, would be the 12-tube AM-FM, stereo-compatible tuner chassis. Above it, also unseen, is the record changer. Then, under the tuner power supply chassis is the remote control chassis, featuring five tubes. Then, to the right of that is the other amp chassis. Total complement of this stereo is six chassis, six rectifiers, four power cords, 44 tubes. There is a 15" woofer and a horn tweeter per channel, all front-firing. All this housed in a solid hardwood cabinet with "ten coats of hand-rubbed finish", in the grandest of Magnvavox style. A well-built, beautifully crafted instrument.
