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Vintage Radio
Tecnico
Tecnico 1952
1952 Model
Model 1259A
1259A
The
The Pacemaker
Pacemaker
By Associate Professor Graham Parslow
Australian radios do not come much quirkier than this one. In this set,
the entire dial flips up during use, exposing the speaker grille, which
is normally hidden behind it. Unfortunately, this is a case of ‘style over
substance’, as the sound quality suffers from this unusual configuration.
The standard case for portables of
the early 50s was a fabric-coated timber box with a flip-up or down panel
that protected the dial and speaker. So
this design is quite a deviation from
the norm. Unfortunately, the relatively
small area revealed when the dial is
flipped up limits the useful size of the
speaker that can be mounted behind it.
In this case, it is a Rola 5C 5-inch
speaker that provides inferior performance to other contemporary portables, which often incorporated 6in or
8in speakers.
This set was available with other
case colours, including red and grey.
Most buyers were likely to choose a
Pacemaker for style, rather than performance. Despite this, they went all-out
with the circuit design, including fitting it with an RF amplification stage.
It has both battery and mains power
supply options. A visually identical
battery-only model was also available,
designated 1259B.
The back panel of the radio clicks
into place without retaining screws,
so it is easy to move the mains power
cord in and out of storage.
My first impression on seeing the
chassis from the rear is that everything
is sturdy and comparable to most other
portables of the time. A minor exception is the slim mains transformer, but
it does not need to deliver high power, and there is limited space available for it.
miniature valves have been used for a
conventional lineup of functions for a
superhet radio with RF amplification.
The circuit for this set is therefore
significantly different from the 1946
model 651 “Aristocrat” and 1950 model 1050 “Fortress” sets from the same
manufacturer that we described previously. Those articles were featured
in our February 2020 (siliconchip.
com.au/Article/12350) & April 2020
(siliconchip.com.au/ Article/13817)
issues, respectively.
One innovative aspect of
this radio is
the use of a selenium rectifier stack,
rather than a rectifier valve, which
uses five selenium elements to produce DC from the mains transformer
secondary. Selenium diodes could
not withstand much more than 25V
peak inverse voltage, so this stack of
five can deliver 112V to C27 (50µF,
150V).
The voltage dropping resistor R19
(1.5kW, 1W) lowers the HT to 94V. Toggle switch S2, at the rear of the chassis,
provides an easy means to switch
between battery and mains.
In this case, the battery is a
dual-output type in a single package (Eveready type
Features
In 1952, most old stock of full-size
octal valves had been used up, and sets
using all miniature valves were becoming the norm. In this case, five 7-pin
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Australia’s electronics magazine
99
753), incorporating a 9V “A” battery
and a 90V “B” battery.
The filaments of these one-series
valves are all carefully manufactured
so that they draw 50mA at 1.5V, allowing them to be connected in series.
That also applies to the 3V4 audio
output pentode valve, which has two
1.5V filaments in series, so it can be
driven by either 3V between pins 1 &
7, or 1.5V with pins 1 and 7 joined,
plus a connection to pin 5 (the centre tap).
So there are four valves in this set
with 1.5V filaments and one with a
3V filament, giving 9V total (4 × 1.5V
+ 3V). The 3V4 is the output valve,
so it needs higher electron emission
from the filament to provide the meagre 250mW of audio output; hence, its
filament consumes twice the power of
the others, operating at the same current but with twice the voltage.
When it comes to listening, it is
decibels rather than watts that determines the acceptability of the listening experience, so the 3V4 is perfectly
adequate for this radio.
Construction
As indicated on the circuit diagram,
the loop antenna that forms the primary tuning coil is located behind the
dial scale. The brass spring clip used to
connect an external aerial is mounted
on the side of the chassis adjacent to
the “A” stencilled on the rear panel of
the chassis. The other end of the chassis has a similar earth clip adjacent to
the “E” marked on the chassis.
The location of the loop antenna,
elevated above the metal components
within the case, means that there is
no shielding blocking reception from
any direction. In practice, the antenna by itself is adequate for receiving
local stations, partly due to the extra
amplification provided by the first
1T4 pentode valve, operating as an
RF amplifier.
The mechanism driving the flip-up
lid is relatively simple, as illustrated
in Fig.2 for removing the chassis from
the cabinet. The dial string is driven
by a second drum attached to the tuning capacitor shaft. The string passes
through a hole in the right-hand pivot
point of the dial. The flexibility of the
string easily copes with the rotation of
the lid through 180° without overly affecting its tension.
Disassembly may seem like a fiendish task, but it is surprisingly easy. Removing two chassis clamping screws
at the rear, then removing the knobs
allows the chassis to slide out. The
dial must be kept at 90° as the chassis is removed, so it passes smoothly
The case is most likely
made from PVC, not
Bakelite.
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Silicon Chip
Australia’s electronics magazine
through a slot in the case above the
speaker grille.
Circuit details
The circuit is shown in Fig.1. It’s a
relatively conventional superhet with
an RF preamplifier. This preamplifier
stage means that a three-gang tuning
capacitor is needed, with one gang
for tuning the aerial circuit, one for
the local oscillator and one for the RF
preamplifier. This ensures that only
signals around the tuned station are
amplified.
The local oscillator (L4, L5 and C13)
produces the appropriate difference
frequency to feed to the oscillator grid
(marked OG) on the 1R5. L4 provides
positive feedback to the local oscillator to sustain oscillation. The 455kHz
IF signal passes from the 1R5 mixer to
the first IF transformer, for IF amplification by the second 1T4.
The second IF transformer is coupled to the single diode in the 1S5
diode-pentode valve to demodulate
the signal and also to generate the automatic gain control (AGC) voltage.
This feeds back to the first two stages
to lower gain for high strength signals
via R10 (1MW).
R12 (500kW) is the volume control
potentiometer that passes the signal
to the 1S5 audio preamplifier pentode grid. There is no tone control on
this radio.
The 3V4 output pentode grid gets
audio from the 1S5 via 10nF capacitor C25. Grid bias is generated via the
series filament connections. The 3V4
filaments are connected at the top of
the 9V supply stack, and this is a directly-heated valve, so pin 5 is also
the cathode connection. Its grid is DC
biased to ground, so the grid is negative relative to the cathode.
While using a directly-heated valve
can complicate the design, it has the
advantage of a near-instant turn on
without a significant warm-up period. The selenium solid-state rectifier
facilitates quick operation on mains;
other contemporary mains/battery receivers that used a 6X4 valve rectifier
with an indirectly heated cathode took
some time for the HT supply to come
up after switch-on.
When powered from the mains,
the filament current is derived from
the full HT using series resistor R20,
specified as 2kW, 5W. In practice, R20
is two 4kW resistors in parallel, both
rated at 5W. This combination drops
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.1: the Tecnico 1259A came in two versions: a B variant which could only be
powered via a battery (an Eveready 753); and the A variant which also included
a mains plug and the necessary circuitry to allow the 240V AC 50/60Hz mains to
supply the required 90V HT and 9V LT. Another difference is that in the 1259B,
C18 (a 250µF 12V electrolytic capacitor connected to the filament of pentode 1T4)
is instead rated at 25µF 40V.
June 2020 101
Australia’s electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
103V; the dissipation will be just over
5W, shared by the two resistors.
Its operating mains power totals
11W. From a manufacturing perspective, the extra cost to provide a separate 9V supply, reducing mains power consumption (and waste heat) by
around 5W, would be hard to justify.
Power use does not change with audio volume because the output stage
operates in Class-A mode.
Restoration
Fortunately, this radio presented
with no component failures. However,
before powering it up, I cleaned all the
pins. Experience has shown me that
many portables like this one develop
oxide creep, which breaks the continuity of the filament connections.
I initially powered it up from a dual-output bench supply. It drew 50mA
from the 9V supply and 13mA from
the 90V supply, for a total power consumption of 1.62W. These are spot-on,
based on the manufacturers’ data, so
all seemed well. Reception tests then
proved that it was fully functional.
That’s lucky because fault-finding
on this radio would be difficult. The
chassis is unusually thin as a result of
the speaker being mounted well back
into the body of the cabinet. Components under the chassis obscure all of
the valve bases. So directly checking
pin voltages is not possible.
Physical restoration required replacing the carry handle, the Tecnico
badge in the centre of the dial and the
yellowed cellulose dial cover.
The clear dial was reproduced using polycarbonate sheet that I cut to
shape using tin snips. Luckily, the
polycarbonate did not require heat
moulding to fit because it is firmly
retained in position by the screws
holding the central Tecnico badge.
The original badge was screenprinted with the Tecnico logo, and
that printing had all but disappeared. Pictures of other radios allowed a reproduction to be created
with graphics software and I then
printed it on lightweight paper. This
paper deformed evenly, so it glued
smoothly onto the dome-shaped aluminium badge.
Above you can see the rear view of the Tecnico 1259A’s chassis showing the
five valves, power transformer, variable capacitor and Rola 5-inch speaker; the
power switch is also visible at lower right. One nice feature, is that all valves
are marked on the chassis.
Right: the Tecnico badge is a ►
reproduction printed on paper
and glued onto an aluminium
badge. The dial was made using a
polycarbonate sheet cut to size.
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Australia’s electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
Conclusion
As mentioned in passing earlier,
I wrote up the Tecnico models 651
(Aristocrat) and 1050 (The Fortress) in
previous Vintage Radio articles. This
article on the Pacemaker completes
the trilogy, covering the stand-out radio icons made by Tecnico.
So who designed this unusual radio? It is most likely to be Zenith in
the USA.
A Zenith advertisement in the Saturday Evening Post of 1948 proclaims
“The new Zenith Pacemaker is one
great forward step in radionic engineering and modern styling”.
The Pacemaker then appeared
in New Zealand, manufactured
by Collier and Beale in Wellington (see the book “Radio Days” by
Peter Sheridan and Ritchie Singer,
p247).
Tecnico had associations with
Collier and Beale as they had previously made and marketed Tecnico
Aristocrat radios. Consequently, it
seems that the right to use the Pacemaker design passed to Tecnico.
The cabinet of the radio featured
here is moulded with the attribution
“Seco mould CAT. No. 700-1 C&B Ltd”
and it seems likely that the cases were
imported from the USA (other Tecnico
models in my collection do not have
this attribution).
These are my own surmises, and
they may be in error; any corrections
from readers who know more would
SC
be welcome.
The underside of the Tecnico 1259A’s
chassis is absolutely packed with
components connected via point-topoint wiring. This makes any
form of testing quite difficult.
The Zenith radio in question which
has a near identical design to the
Tecnico 1259A with the exception of
the dial.
►
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Australia’s electronics magazine
Fig.2 (left): a diagram showing the
dial cord arrangement and explaining
how to remove the chassis.
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