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Vintage Radio
Philips
Philips 1963
1963 “Musicmaker”
“Musicmaker” MM1
MM1
mantel
mantel radio
radio
By Associate Professor Graham Parslow
Philips valve radios from the 1960s had excellent sound, came in a
variety of interesting colours and were quite affordable at the time. This
article covers three different models: the model 224, MM1 and MM1/01,
as they look similar. Their performance is indistinguishable because they
all use the same circuit and components.
The design of valve-based superhets was fully mature by the 1960s. By
then, they were pretty much all using
tried and tested components and circuitry. The competing Kriesler range
of valve mantels were comparable and
sold in greater numbers, as judged by
the number of remaining units held
by collectors.
The Philips radios had a more conservative style, and that may have
been advantageous for a kitchen radio where function was the prime
consideration. Philips also made other valve radios in the 1960s, notably
the mantel model 172 using inductive
(permeability) tuning, as well as valve
radiograms.
But the biggest competitors to these
radios were the then-new transistor
types. Philips made a good range of
transistor sets, both for battery and
mains operation, at prices comparable to the valve radios.
Their transistor models included the
Philadelphia model MM2, the Metropolitan model MT7 and the Leisuremate model RB290, all are pictured at
the end of the article.
The downside to these transistor
radios was an audio output of only
about 300mW before distortion became severe.
Australian Philips valve and transistor radios were manufactured at
Hendon in South Australia. Local
production ceased in the early 1970s
when tariff protection was lifted and
imported radios took the market.
Those imported radios usually cost
less than just the local cost of the
components!
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Silicon Chip
Three similar models
The model 224 was introduced in
1961 at £27, and was marketed with
the title “Futura Five”. It came in one
of six colours: ember red, flamingo,
charcoal, turquoise, grey and primrose.
The escutcheon at the sides of the
dial had a two-tone colour scheme,
with one section usually being metallic chrome or gold. The other section
was usually black, but sometimes colour-matched to the case.
The knobs were cream with eight
raised flutes. The volume and tone
knobs at the left drove concentric pots,
with a DPDT on/off switch linked to
the tone control.
The tuning knob used the same
two segments to duplicate the appearance of the left-hand knob, but it
was mounted onto a single shaft with
stepped diameters to lock the sections
together.
The easiest way to identify the model is to look at the paper label pasted
under the case. However, these labels
are easily damaged and sometimes
missing. An example of the label from
an MM1 radio is shown at the end of
the article.
The model MM1, marketed as the
The Philips model MM1 (1963)
is nearly identical to the Futura
Five 224, except it has provision for
an external pick-up. Sadly, this particular
example has a crack in the top of its case.
Australia’s electronics magazine
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easily when subjected to trauma. The
mauve-coloured case shown here was
particularly badly affected by heat.
The last of the line was the model
MM1/01, which was an entirely cosmetic change. The knobs were made
more conical in shape, with more
flutes, and the escutcheons were black
in all sections.
Circuit details
Why add the pick-up facility to
this mature product line? Possibly, it
was to compete with the better-selling
Kriesler radios that had such an input.
Another reason may have been to promote the low-end phono turntables
made by Philips that sold for around £5
at the time (see the accompanying advertisment from National Radio Supplies Sydney, originally in RTV&H,
December 1963 on p114).
These sets draw around 30-32W in
use. Unfortunately, the thermo-mouldable plastic case is easily damaged by
heat, including the internal heat generated by the valves. The cases also crack
Referring now to the original circuit
diagram, reproduced overleaf, L1 is
an RF choke wound around a 6.8kW
resistor, and is described as a loading coil. Loading coils are added to
achieve more efficient coupling of RF
to a tuned circuit from a short external aerial. The external aerial coupling
coil, L2, is three turns around the 6.5inch (165mm) long ferrite rod, spaced
20mm away from L3.
The circuitry around mixer/oscillator valve V1 is conventional, with L3C1 for tuning and C4-L4 to set the local oscillator frequency. Oscillation is
sustained by feedback from L5. In all
these Philips radios, the circuit data
specifies a 6AN7 for V1, but the later
radios had 6AN7As installed.
The nine-pin 6AN7 mixer valve was
released in 1948 and became widely used throughout the 1950s. The
joint release of the 6AN7 and 6M5 by
Philips is described in Radio and Hobbies magazine, January 1950, page 67
(a recommended read).
The Philips MM1/01 (1965) is the
same as the MM1 with changes only to
its external appearance, such as the conical
knobs, dial, escutcheon, grille and case colour.
This extract of the RTV&H advert
from National Radio Supplies Sydney,
shows contemporary turntables for
sale.
The Philips Futura Five 224 (1961) is a
5-valve superhet mantel radio enclosed in a plastic case.
“Musicmaker”, was introduced in
1965 and added a pick-up input to the
circuit. The way this connected can
be seen from the pseudo-3D chassis
layout on the MM1 label. The almost
identical model 224 label had a simpler 2D chassis diagram because it did
not have a pick-up input.
This offers another way of recognising the earlier model 224, because the
224 case has only one lower slot at the
rear, positioned to view the chassis serial number. The MM1 radios have an
additional narrow slot for pick-up access, as seen at the bottom of the mauve
case on page 97.
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January 2021 95
The 6AN7 draws 0.23A of filament
current at 6.3V. The slightly more efficient, but otherwise identical, 6AN7A
valve was released in 1961. It had better cathode emission and required
0.3A for the filament.
In a radio with parallel filaments
supplied with 6.3V, there is no problem with interchanging the two valve
types. However, farm radios powered
by 32V DC often connected the filaments of five valves in series, with
equalising resistors to regulate the
6AN7 filaments to 0.23A.
If a 6AN7A is used as a replacement
in these 32V radios, the equalising resistors should be altered to maintain
correct filament voltage and current.
The IF signal created by the mixer
enters the first IF transformer from the
plate of the 6AN7. IF amplification is
carried out by a 6BH5 pentode.
The 9-pin 6BH5 was released in
1952. This Philips-made valve was
only built for the Australian market,
and is uncommon in non-Philips radios.
The amplified IF signal is detected
by the diode connected to pin 6 of the
9-pin 6BD7. The 6BD7 triode-double
diode is a commonly encountered
valve dating from 1950.
The IF transformers are the thin
rectangular types that Philips introduced in the early 1950s. With age,
some of these transformers have gone
open-circuit. As the internals are set
in resin, sadly they cannot be repaired.
Fortunately, none of the IF transformers in the sets described in this article
had failed.
The bottom end of the second IF
transformer secondary (L9) is grounded for the 455kHz IF signal by mica
capacitor C15 (220pF). C15 has no effect on audio frequencies, so demodulated audio passes across R7 (47kW),
superimposed on the negative DC output from the diode. The AGC circuit
passes a negative bias to the preceding
6AN7 and 6BH5 grids via R6 (3.3MW).
Delayed AGC is achieved by 47W
resistor R14 between the centre tap
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Silicon Chip
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This photo of
an MM1 was
taken before
restoration, as
can be seen by
the dust and
other debris on
the underside of
the chassis. The
external links
to a pick-up can
be seen at the
top of the photo
with shielded
cable to connect
to the audio
amplification
section.
of the power transformer and ground,
with the low-signal grid bias for the
6AN7 and 6BH5 being derived from
the transformer end of R14. This means
that a higher AGC voltage is required
before the gains of those valves are
reduced.
To listen to the radio, the A-B jumper
link in the pickup connector needs to
be in place. The demodulated audio
signal is then fed to the 500kW volume
control (R8). The link has a pull-string
accessible through its cabinet slot.
A ceramic or crystal phono cartridge
can instead be connected between B
and C on the linking socket. The audio signal from the cartridge is then
amplified by the 6BD7 triode and conventionally passed to the 6M5 grid via
10nF coupling capacitor C18.
Many radios have top-cut tone controls acting at a point of high voltage
that compromises the reliability of
the components. This circuit sensibly
places R13 (a 250kW pot) and C19 in
a position that is nominally at 0V DC.
The 6M5 output pentode has 6.5V
of grid bias, generated by R17 (220W).
Unusually, there is no cathode bypass
electrolytic across R17. A bypass capacitor here would provide a low-impedance path for audio, thereby maximising the amplified output from the
pentode.
This gave me a chance to see how
critical, or otherwise, that conventional bypass electrolytic is. I found
that adding a 22µF capacitor across
R17 made no audible difference, so
It’s a bit hard
to see from this
angle, but the
connection for
the pick-up is
at the bottom
rear of the
chassis (circled
in red). Here it
has been fitted
with a wire-link
between points
“A” and “B” for
normal radio
operation.
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The Philips MM1 label originally had a red background, but it has been changed here to white for clarity.
Philips did not make an unreasonable omission.
There is no convenient place to
mount the speaker transformer on
the top of the chassis, so it is mounted below. The resulting ‘spare space’
above the chassis is occupied by the
aluminium cans for filter electrolytics
C16 and C17. There is no filter choke
in the HT supply.
The 4 x 5.5-inch (100 x 140mm) elliptical Rola speaker has the 1960s
rounded edge magnet profile. This
replaced the plain cylindrical profile that Rola used for magnets in the
1950s.
The baked enamel frames of these
speakers resist rusting, but the magnets often show rust. The Rola speakers mounted in these radios sound
surprisingly good for their modest
dimensions.
Faults and troubleshooting
Although these radios are ‘modern’,
they are still over 50 years old. Most
of the original Ducon paper capaci-
tors remain serviceable. Nevertheless,
in three of these radios, I found C18
was leaky and compromised the 6M5
grid bias.
Editor’s note: some restorers prefer
to replace paper capacitors regardless,
as they will fail eventually.
I selected a model 224 to listen to
as a shed radio after replacing only
C18. For some days, it behaved well,
but then failed completely. Rocking
the valves in their sockets revealed
the problem.
The fix at this time was cleaning
the pins of the 6AN7 and 6BH5. After a few more days, it developed a
crackle. Suspicion immediately fell
on the two mica capacitors, C7 and
C15. Against optimistic expectations,
their replacement did nothing to help
alleviate the crackle.
The next step was to begin replacing the paper capacitors, starting with
C20 across the output transformer.
The crackle stopped after this single
replacement, so the radio went back
into service.
The back of another MM1 radio which is badly deformed from the heat of
the valves during operation (likely with high ambient
temperature and poor ventilation).
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Silicon Chip
Australia’s electronics magazine
However, the crackle soon started
again, so it was back to the bench for
a systematic replacement of all paper
capacitors.
After every capacitor was replaced,
the radio still produced abundant
crackle. Worse still, only strong stations now tuned in weakly and turning up the volume drove the set into
audio oscillation at around 2kHz.
All resistors checked as true to value, except R2 and R4, which had gone
significantly high in value. Replacing
them did not change anything.
If the problem cannot be found
below the chassis, then it might be
above. As soon as I looked at the tuning capacitor, I saw that trimmer C2
had broken away minutely from the
solder joint to Earth. Repairing that
changed nothing, so it was back to
looking below.
It then became clear how I had compromised the set by a simple mistake.
The original, large capacitor C6 was
soldered into a cramped space and the
more compact polyester replacement
allowed me to connect it to a more
convenient Earth point.
The problem was that the free tag
I used was above an Earthing solder
point on the chassis, but the tag was
not connected to it, so C6 was floating.
A simple Earth link brought the radio back to full function, complete
with crackle.
Back on the top of the chassis, removing the mixer valve did not affect
the crackle, so I determined that it was
being introduced at a later stage.
Removing the 6BH5 IF amplifier
valve produced blissful silence. I had
not previously run into a crackling
valve, but a replacement 6BH5 was
indeed the answer. Since replacing
the 6BH5, the radio has been perfectly reliable.
SC
siliconchip.com.au
These three Philips transistor
radios were contemporaries of the
MM1 radios in the 1960s. From top-tobottom: Metropolitan MT7 mantel; Philadelphia
MM2 mantel; and Leisuremate RB290 portable.
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