- published: 09 Nov 2011
- views: 7196
18:58
FABRICANDO DISCOS 78 RPM - RCA VICTOR 1942 - LEGENDADO
Volto a agradecer a todos que ajudaram na correção das legendas e informo que um novo víde...
published: 30 Aug 2012
FABRICANDO DISCOS 78 RPM - RCA VICTOR 1942 - LEGENDADO
Volto a agradecer a todos que ajudaram na correção das legendas e informo que um novo vídeo foi postado com estas correções em http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qN0G1S0MHnU
Por favor façam lá as suas considerações pois este será retirado do ar em breve. Abraços Ricardo Manzo (Collector's)
- published: 30 Aug 2012
- views: 8702
7:42
Living Stereo - RCA Victor
Living Stereo - RCA Victor - old public information film (US)
I've been very busy recen...
published: 01 Jun 2007
Living Stereo - RCA Victor
Living Stereo - RCA Victor - old public information film (US)
I've been very busy recenty converting the videos and recently set up another account - I have uploaded a lot more videos there - check it out - http://www.youtube.com/CharacterControl
The videos on my other account have more complete descriptions, and dates wherever possible, and some similar videos called "RCA 21-inch TV Screen", "RCA Hide-Away TV" (1959), "RCA Victor Commercial", "The RCA 16mm Sound Projector" and "An RCA Presentation: Television" (1939) - if RCA is your thing!
- published: 01 Jun 2007
- views: 17899
9:48
Watch a 1961 RCA Victor COLOR Television CTC-11!
Here's a 1961 RCA Victor CTC-11 chassis color TV. Its a remote controlled set. I restore...
published: 07 Oct 2008
Watch a 1961 RCA Victor COLOR Television CTC-11!
Here's a 1961 RCA Victor CTC-11 chassis color TV. Its a remote controlled set. I restored it electronically back in '03. It hasn't been turned on in close to two years until today. You are watching the JFK inaugural speech recorded January 26, 1961.
- published: 07 Oct 2008
- views: 32815
10:34
RCA VICTOR 78 & 33 1/3 RPM RECORD CHANGER PROGRAM TRANSCRIPTION DEMONSTRATION
Here is a better view of the record changer in my RCA model 381 from 1934. The last record...
published: 15 Aug 2009
RCA VICTOR 78 & 33 1/3 RPM RECORD CHANGER PROGRAM TRANSCRIPTION DEMONSTRATION
Here is a better view of the record changer in my RCA model 381 from 1934. The last record is a special RCA Victor Demonstration record called the victor artists party that plays at 33 1/3. Some RCA consoles had the option. The switch at the left of the turntable changes it from 78 rpm to 33 /1/3 to play the special program transcriptions. I swiched it right after the second record was removed. You can see the turntable slow down. The records came as one or two sided and 10 or 12 inch in size. The album sleeve tells you to use the RCA Victor chromium green shank needle for 78's. The red shank for recording on blank records. And orange shank for long playing records (33 1/3) After almost 30 years of throwing 10 or 12 inch records it has never broken one !! Enjoy !!
- published: 15 Aug 2009
- views: 17967
5:48
RCA Victor RP-168 Record Changer 1949 1st edition 45 RPM Player
This is a 1949 RCA RP-168 45 RPM record changer. This is the one that started it all. Firs...
published: 29 Sep 2010
RCA Victor RP-168 Record Changer 1949 1st edition 45 RPM Player
This is a 1949 RCA RP-168 45 RPM record changer. This is the one that started it all. First sold in April 1949, this is the earliest example I have turned up in 40+ years of collecting and servicing these players. This particular changer was in a 1952 Emerson bakelite phono. It was common back then for manufacturers to "flush the toilet" and dump old stock to other companies. By 1950, RCA was well into making the RP-190 changers and was left with a number of these old 168's. What better way to get rid of them than to sell them? Still perfectly usable, the 168's ended up in many brands- like Motorola, Emerson, Tele-Tone, etc.
- published: 29 Sep 2010
- views: 3914
2:43
Rare RCA Victor 45 Record Player 1949 Model 9-EY-3
Here is a rare RCA Victor Tube 45 Player. This was the first year that RCA Victor Victrol...
published: 27 Mar 2010
Rare RCA Victor 45 Record Player 1949 Model 9-EY-3
Here is a rare RCA Victor Tube 45 Player. This was the first year that RCA Victor Victrola introduced the 45 Player. These original players put out a bold sound through tubes and this is when 45 players were at about their best, when they were first introduced before they became kid toys with poor sound quality. I have a sample of Jerry Lee Lewis and Joan Baez I think you will enjoy the old record sound and take a stroll down memory lane. Samplings of " Whole Lot of Shaking Going On" and " The Night they Drove Old Dixie Down".
- published: 27 Mar 2010
- views: 6059
7:03
Watch a 1956 RCA VICTOR CTC-5 COLOR TELEVISION!! "Roundie"
This is the "Westcott" RCA Victor model 21-CT-7857 for 1956 with the CTC-5 chassis....
published: 05 Jul 2008
Watch a 1956 RCA VICTOR CTC-5 COLOR TELEVISION!! "Roundie"
This is the "Westcott" RCA Victor model 21-CT-7857 for 1956 with the CTC-5 chassis.
- published: 05 Jul 2008
- views: 73695
4:41
RCA Victor's 1949 Preview of the World's First 45 rpm Records!
Once RCA Victor introduced the first 45 rpm phonographs, they knew the importance of havin...
published: 18 Sep 2009
RCA Victor's 1949 Preview of the World's First 45 rpm Records!
Once RCA Victor introduced the first 45 rpm phonographs, they knew the importance of having not just one 45 rpm record available, but a selection of different artists and styles from which buyers could choose.
Thus, in February 1949, they mixed a little of everything in with the very first batch of 45s shipped to record stores. They arrived in a custom envelope labeled: This Is Your Preview of the New RCA Victor 45 R.P.M. RECORD LINE!
Inside are seven singles, each of which is made using a different color plastic — each color representing seven different musical styles.
The colors and the records are: cerise, or cherry red, for Blues & Rhythm (That's All Right, Big Boy Crudup, 50-0000); green for Country & Western (Spanish Fandango, Spade Cooley, 48-0027); sky-blue for International (A Klein Melamedl, Saul Meisels, 51-0000); midnight blue for Popular Classics (The French Marching Song, Al Goodman & His Orchestra, 52-0006); and black for Popular (Because, Dick Leibert, 47-2857).
The remaining two in the series are: red for Red Seal Classical and yellow for Children's Entertainment. Unfortunately, we have yet to learn the artists and titles of this pair of discs.
As the music industry's very first 45s, the preview envelope suggests: Use these seven records as samples between now and March 31st (1949), and for use with the forthcoming window and counter displays.
The copy writers then wisely and amazingly foretell: You may wish to hold them as collector's items — the first production run of a record that will set the pace for the entire industry!
Made specifically for in-store use, and not broadcasters, this Whirl-Away Demonstration Record played over and over, calling attention to the colorful display.
Now everyone can hear music history being made.
Especially comforting is knowing they were all "recorded in the quality zone."
- published: 18 Sep 2009
- views: 8741
5:13
1958 RCA Victor Hi-Fi Stereo Console with turntable
This is my 1958 RCA "Orthophonic Stereo" HI-FI console. I bought this about a year ago fro...
published: 20 Dec 2007
1958 RCA Victor Hi-Fi Stereo Console with turntable
This is my 1958 RCA "Orthophonic Stereo" HI-FI console. I bought this about a year ago from a thrift shop. It had a couple of blown tubes, I replaced them and was ASTOUNDED by the sound quality this thing puts out. I thought a Stereo from 1958 would sound like shit, I was sorely mistaken. It has an "Electronic Tuning Eye" which is very, very cool. In this video you will watch as it warms up, plays music, see the "Tuning Eye" in action, and watch the record stacker stack! Oh, and I should mention I took this console home in the back seat of a Civic sedan... with two other people in it.
- published: 20 Dec 2007
- views: 25593
23:43
Sound And The Story - 1956 RCA Victor Vinyl Records Educational Documentary
RCA Victor demonstrates how vinyl records were made using step by step examples of the pro...
published: 13 Jan 2013
Sound And The Story - 1956 RCA Victor Vinyl Records Educational Documentary
RCA Victor demonstrates how vinyl records were made using step by step examples of the production process. Starting with a live recording being taped, we then see a master being made, duplication of the master, a mold, and duplication of the mold ready for mass production of the latest audio masterpiece.
- published: 13 Jan 2013
- views: 853
Youtube results:
5:47
Television Remote Control 1961 RCA Victor First Full Remote Control Color TV
more at http://electronics.quickfound.net/
"Early technology to enable the channel-surfer...
published: 03 Nov 2012
Television Remote Control 1961 RCA Victor First Full Remote Control Color TV
more at http://electronics.quickfound.net/
"Early technology to enable the channel-surfer."
Public domain film from the Library of Congress Prelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remote_control
A remote control is a component of an electronics device, most commonly a television set, DVD player and home theater systems originally used for operating the television device wirelessly from a short line-of-sight distance. Remote control has continually evolved and advanced over recent years to include Bluetooth connectivity, motion sensor enabled capabilities and voice control.
The main technology used in home remote controls is infrared (IR). The signal between a remote control handset and the device it is controlling are infrared pulses, which are invisible to the human eye. The transmitter in the remote control handset sends out a pulse of infrared light when a button is pressed on the handset. A transmitter is often a light emitting diode (LED) which is built into the pointing end of the remote control handset. The infrared light pulse represents a binary code that corresponds to a certain command, such as (power on). The receiver passes the code to a microprocessor, which decodes it and carries out the command.
Commonly, remote controls are Consumer IR devices used to issue commands from a distance to televisions or other consumer electronics such as stereo systems, DVD players and dimmers. Remote controls for these devices are usually small wireless handheld objects with an array of buttons for adjusting various settings such as television channel, track number, and volume. In fact, for the majority of modern devices with this kind of control, the remote contains all the function controls while the controlled device itself only has a handful of essential primary controls. Most of these remotes communicate to their respective devices via infrared signals and a few via radio signals. Earlier remote controls in the 1970s used ultrasonic tones. Television IR signals can be mimicked by a universal remote, which is able to emulate the functionality of most major brand television remote controls...
History
One of the earliest examples of remote control was developed in 1898 by Nikola Tesla, and described in his patent, U.S. Patent 613,809, named Method of an Apparatus for Controlling Mechanism of Moving Vehicle or Vehicles. In 1898, he demonstrated a radio-controlled boat to the public during an electrical exhibition at Madison Square Garden. Tesla called his boat a "teleautomaton".
In 1903, Leonardo Torres Quevedo presented the Telekino at the Paris Academy of Science... The Telekino consisted of a robot that executed commands transmitted by electromagnetic waves. With the Telekino, Torres-Quevedo laid down modern wireless remote-control operation principles and was a pioneer in the field of remote control...
The first remote-controlled model aeroplane flew in 1932, and the use of remote control technology for military purposes was worked intensively during the Second World War, one result of this being the German Wasserfall missile.
By the late 1930s, several radio manufacturers offered remote controls for some of their higher-end models. Most of these were connected to the set being controlled by wires, but the Philco Mystery Control (1939) was a battery-operated low-frequency radio transmitter, thus making it the first wireless remote control for a consumer electronics device.
The first remote intended to control a television was developed by Zenith Radio Corporation in 1950. The remote, called "Lazy Bones", was connected to the television by a wire...
In 1956, Robert Adler developed "Zenith Space Command", a wireless remote. It was mechanical and used ultrasound to change the channel and volume. When the user pushed a button on the remote control, it clicked and struck a bar, hence the term "clicker". Each bar emitted a different frequency and circuits in the television detected this sound. The invention of the transistor made possible cheaper electronic remotes that contained a piezoelectric crystal that was fed by an oscillating electric current at a frequency near or above the upper threshold of human hearing, though still audible to dogs...
- published: 03 Nov 2012
- views: 663
1:20
Fonografo - PHONÓGRAPHO RCA VICTOR- vendotodo1968ar
PIEZA ÚNICA CON MÁS DE 100 AÑOS
PHONÓGRAPHO RCA VICTOR
FUNCIONANDO PERFECTAMENTE
MADERA DE...
published: 09 May 2011
Fonografo - PHONÓGRAPHO RCA VICTOR- vendotodo1968ar
PIEZA ÚNICA CON MÁS DE 100 AÑOS
PHONÓGRAPHO RCA VICTOR
FUNCIONANDO PERFECTAMENTE
MADERA DE ENCINO SIN RASTROS DE POLILLA.
CONSERVA SUS ETIQUETAS ORIGINALES.
SOLO TIENES QUE COLOCAR UN DISCO, LE DAS VUELTA A LA MANIVELA, SOLTAR EL SEGURO DEL FRENO PARA QUE EL PLATO COMIENCE A GIRAR, BAJAR EL AMPLIFICADOR CON SU AGUJA INSTALADA Y LISTO!!!
SU TROMPETA ES DE BRONCE MOVIBLE A 180° EN PERFECTO ESTADO, COMO SE VE EN LAS FOTOS.
MEDIDAS
ALTO 70 cm. CON LA TROMPETA
ANCHO 40 cm. CON MANIVELA
PROFUNDIDAD 65cm.
Incluye 30 discos y 2 cajas agujas (APROXIMADAMENTE 40) para poder disfrutar de su sonido desde el primer día. Maravilloso aparato que además de decorar cualquier lugar de la casa, permite poder escuchar música antigua como si viviésemos en esa época.
- published: 09 May 2011
- views: 878
18:01
BILLO EN RCA VICTOR - VOL. I - LADO "B" - 6 TEMAS.-
L.P. - 2010 - BILLO EN RCA VICTOR - VOL. I - 6 TEMAS.-
Detalles de esta producción:
LADO...
published: 22 Jan 2013
BILLO EN RCA VICTOR - VOL. I - LADO "B" - 6 TEMAS.-
L.P. - 2010 - BILLO EN RCA VICTOR - VOL. I - 6 TEMAS.-
Detalles de esta producción:
LADO "B":
B1.- Menea la Olla.- Rafa Galindo
B2.- Ay! Cutiro.- Kuroky Sánchez (02:57)
B3.- Dulces Sonrisas.- Rafa Galindo (05:38)
B4.- Nació un Bebé.- Kuroky Sánchez (08:37)
B5.- Guarachando.- Víctor Pérez (11:29)
B6.- Ven.- Rafa Galindo (14:36)
Rookie se dió a la tarea de recopilar en 6 volúmenes los temas pertenecientes a la discografía de Billo Frómeta durante su paso por RCA VICTOR; etapa bautizada por el maestro Frómeta como la Primera República, iniciada el 31 de agosto de 1940, hace ya 70 años. Con este sello La orquesta grabó 35 discos de 78 rpm (70 canciones). Cabe anotar que de este período de la orquesta solo sobrevivía Rafa Galindo, quien falleció en el mes de mayo. Los temas se presentan en orden cronológico de grabación.
Kuroky Sánchez fue un cantante nacido en República Dominicana, que hasta 1942 estuvo con la Billo´s Caracas Boys. Falleció en Caracas en 1954.
Víctor Pérez fue un gran guarachero que hasta el día de su muerte, hace unos 10 años, estuvo en actividad. También fue vocalista de grandes orquestas como la de Aldemaro Romero, la de Chucho Sanoja, Casino Riverside, Pedro José Belisario, la Rafa-Víctor (en sociedad con Rafa Galindo) y Los Solistas.-
- published: 22 Jan 2013
- views: 120