The Fine Things are Always Hand Made
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I have 3 Sixteens: 1) HH 13. 2) CC 173, in Acousticraft cabinet. 3) GG 153, stored in its original Scott boxes, Shipped by rail 12-20-37 to Mrs. Charles D. MacDonald, Bradford VT.
OK, I finally made a trip to my shop and got most of the numbers on my Scotts. Here goes...
Laureate: S# WW-254
Laureate: S# XX-277
Phantom Deluxe 1941 NO FM: S# DD-352
AW-23: S# Z-546
AW-23: S# A-724
AW-12 Deluxe: H-55
AW-12 Deluxe: C-187
I have one more AW-15, but it is still in its shipping box! I'll get that number later.
Still looking for my first Philly...
...ted
Ted -
Thanks....about half of these were new numbers for my records. All fit within expected groups of sets in their prefix. This helps to confirm the existing analysis and the projected production numbers. Hopefully this winter I will be able to update one of my previous articles and publish some info here...
Kent
Ted Coombes said:OK, I finally made a trip to my shop and got most of the numbers on my Scotts. Here goes...
Laureate: S# WW-254
Laureate: S# XX-277
Phantom Deluxe 1941 NO FM: S# DD-352
AW-23: S# Z-546
AW-23: S# A-724
AW-12 Deluxe: H-55
AW-12 Deluxe: C-187
I have one more AW-15, but it is still in its shipping box! I'll get that number later.
Still looking for my first Philly...
...ted
The high frequency speakers were missing. As we were cleaning it up we found a letter tucked under the receiver chassis; the letter was from Scott apologizing for the damage to the speakers and said replacements would be shipped ASAP. The date on the letter was 6 December 1941
Curtis Schweitzer said:The high frequency speakers were missing. As we were cleaning it up we found a letter tucked under the receiver chassis; the letter was from Scott apologizing for the damage to the speakers and said replacements would be shipped ASAP. The date on the letter was 6 December 1941
Wow. Great story.
I'll bet that radio is the only one that is worth more with the speakers missing.
What a great piece of history.
Scott Seickel said:
Curtis Schweitzer said:The high frequency speakers were missing. As we were cleaning it up we found a letter tucked under the receiver chassis; the letter was from Scott apologizing for the damage to the speakers and said replacements would be shipped ASAP. The date on the letter was 6 December 1941
Wow. Great story.
I'll bet that radio is the only one that is worth more with the speakers missing.
What a great piece of history.
In looking at the various pictures on here it looks like the tuning knob on my AW 23 is a little different from most. Mine has a fine tuning capability; there is a lever under the knob that locks into slots on the back of the two piece knob. The metal back half of the knob has a gear reduction in it which when locked gives the wood front half of the knob fine control. Is this unusual?
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