The Fine Things are Always Hand Made
Hello:
I'm Day Radebaugh from El Dorado, Kansas, and was happy to find this site. 30 years ago, when I was a starving student, I lived in a house in Baltimore that was in the process of being sold. They had an old Scott console (with a phonograph, as i recall) which i bought for $5. I couldn't keep the cabinet, but kept all but the phonograph. It's been stored inside ever since.
So now I'd like to have it restored, and I would build a new console to contain it. Do you have any suggestions about how to proceed? Anyone you know of who could tackle a functional restoration of this unit?
Thanks for your help.
Day Radebaugh
Tags:
How is the chrome condition? Do you have the receiver, the amp and the big 15 inch speaker, probably the blue coax version speaker?
If so, you have the complete set. Suggest you upload a photo or two to thisr thread.
Watch ebay,for a cabinet, sometimes an empty one shows up which would be easier and less expensive than replicating one. Or watch for any cabinet big enough for it, not necessarily a radio cabinet.
Go to the Scott Info Archive above, and select set folders, then open up the folder on the Scott 800 to find some information on your radio.
I have restored an 800-B but I am not up for another. There is a lot of work to restore one. but it is a very good sounding set restored.
David C. Poland said:
How is the chrome condition? Do you have the receiver, the amp and the big 15 inch speaker, probably the blue coax version speaker?
If so, you have the complete set. Suggest you upload a photo or two to thisr thread.
Watch ebay,for a cabinet, sometimes an empty one shows up which would be easier and less expensive than replicating one. Or watch for any cabinet big enough for it, not necessarily a radio cabinet.
Go to the Scott Info Archive above, and select set folders, then open up the folder on the Scott 800 to find some information on your radio.
I have restored an 800-B but I am not up for another. There is a lot of work to restore one. but it is a very good sounding set restored.david:
thanks for the suggestions. I believe I have the complete unit, but I will get it out of storage, take some pictures, and upload them to the thread. I've already printed off the contents of the folder, and will study up on it, to help identify what I have.
I'll be back in touch soon.
Day Radebaugh
Here are some pictures of the unit. It's dusty, chrome seems ok. would appreciate your opinion.
thanks
Day Radebaugh
Day Radebaugh said:
David C. Poland said:How is the chrome condition? Do you have the receiver, the amp and the big 15 inch speaker, probably the blue coax version speaker?
If so, you have the complete set. Suggest you upload a photo or two to thisr thread.
Watch ebay,for a cabinet, sometimes an empty one shows up which would be easier and less expensive than replicating one. Or watch for any cabinet big enough for it, not necessarily a radio cabinet.
Go to the Scott Info Archive above, and select set folders, then open up the folder on the Scott 800 to find some information on your radio.
I have restored an 800-B but I am not up for another. There is a lot of work to restore one. but it is a very good sounding set restored.david:
thanks for the suggestions. I believe I have the complete unit, but I will get it out of storage, take some pictures, and upload them to the thread. I've already printed off the contents of the folder, and will study up on it, to help identify what I have.
I'll be back in touch soon.
Day Radebaugh
and some more pictures
Your photos confirm an 800-B with good cosmetic condition. Chrome should clean up nicely - I use Turtle brand Chrome polish - a liquid.
As for a cabinet substitute, you could look for a cabinet big enough to hold the receiver with the amp below on a bottom shelf, behind the speaker. Scott cabinets were open back. As an example, for the past 40 years, I housed my Scott Philharmonic in a Victor phonograph cabinet I found gutted in a Goodwill store which I refinished. This cabinet was big enough, deep enough and strong enough to hold the radio and accommodate the 15 inch speaker. The receiver sat fully exposed on the upper shelf, which displayed the chrome. I installed 3/4 inch plywood below as a speaker board , and applied speaker cloth to protect the speaker cone and for appearance. My amp sat behind the speaker as would be the case in a Scott cabinet.
david:
if i can get this running, i think i'll build a brand new cabinet to show it off. i'd like to display the radio, obviously, but not necessarily the amplifier chassis. the speaker i would put behind grille cloth, clearly. i think i could design something that showed off the best features of the old unit in a new setting.
day
David C. Poland said:
Your photos confirm an 800-B with good cosmetic condition. Chrome should clean up nicely - I use Turtle brand Chrome polish - a liquid.
As for a cabinet substitute, you could look for a cabinet big enough to hold the receiver with the amp below on a bottom shelf, behind the speaker. Scott cabinets were open back. As an example, for the past 40 years, I housed my Scott Philharmonic in a Victor phonograph cabinet I found gutted in a Goodwill store which I refinished. This cabinet was big enough, deep enough and strong enough to hold the radio and accommodate the 15 inch speaker. The receiver sat fully exposed on the upper shelf, which displayed the chrome. I installed 3/4 inch plywood below as a speaker board , and applied speaker cloth to protect the speaker cone and for appearance. My amp sat behind the speaker as would be the case in a Scott cabinet.
The unit is back, and sounding fine. I'm looking forward to designing and having built a cabinet to house it. It will have 3 shelves; the top will hold the tuner, middle amp, bottom speaker. Will have to recreate the wooden faceplate (escutcheon) which was damaged in shipping, but that should be easy with a router.
Have attached a pic with the unit on my bench. Restoration done by Kevin Frattalone and Tom Anderson at Antique Sounds. They did a fine job. It's been 40 years since I first acquired this radio, but it's worth the wait.
Day Radebaugh
Dave:
Didn't pick up on your reference to MC30's and C8's, but if your talking about vintage McIntosh gear, here's some of mine.
Getting ready to have a cabinet built for my refurbed 800B. It will have one horizontal shelf, on which the tuner will sit. Below that, I'll put the speaker. Because of room, I'd like to install the amplifier section a bit below and behind the speaker magnet in its own little cubbyhole.
Does anyone know why the amp couldn't live within, let's say, 6" of that honking big magnet?
Thanks
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