Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old March 1st 07, 03:59 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Mar 2007
Posts: 2
Default Hammarlund Radios...

I am assisting a neighbor with an estate sale. The
estate includes two Hammarlund radios. One is a Model
SP 600, the other is an HQ 170A. I don't know the
condition of the radios. There are also approximately
2,100 radio tubes still in the box. The owner passed
away a couple of weeks ago. He was in the radio/TV
business for years. He was 91 years old.
He also has two oscilloscopes, various testing meter
equipment.
Please let me know if you are interested and I will
send a link to photos of the radios.
Mike
Farmerville Louisiana

  #2   Report Post  
Old March 1st 07, 04:37 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Mar 2007
Posts: 1
Default Hammarlund Radios...

StatHaldol wrote:
I am assisting a neighbor with an estate sale. The
estate includes two Hammarlund radios. One is a Model
SP 600, the other is an HQ 170A. I don't know the
condition of the radios. There are also approximately
2,100 radio tubes still in the box. The owner passed
away a couple of weeks ago. He was in the radio/TV
business for years. He was 91 years old.
He also has two oscilloscopes, various testing meter
equipment.
Please let me know if you are interested and I will
send a link to photos of the radios.
Mike
Farmerville Louisiana


Mike,

I suggest you do these things first:

1. Do a search on closed auctions in Ebay, and get an
average price for the radios before you consider any
offers. Be sure to check if the HQ-170A has the
"VHF" converter(s) in it, since they add a lot
to the value.
2. Have a local ham or TV repair shop check the units out:
you'll get a lot more for them if they've been serviced
and are guaranteed to be working.
3. Since TV repairmen often put old tubes in new boxes,
separate the "New Old Stock" tubes from the pulls.
4. Make a list of the new vs. the pulled tubes, and ask
around to find if any are extraordinarily valuable. If
not, it'll be easier to sell them as a lot instead of
one-by-one.
5. Consult a tax adviser to find out if the estate would
benefit more by donating some or all of the equipment
to a local ham club or school radio club.

I hope this helps.

Bill, W1AC

(Filter noise from my address for direct replies)
  #3   Report Post  
Old March 1st 07, 06:37 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Mar 2007
Posts: 2
Default Hammarlund Radios...

On Feb 28, 9:37 pm, Bill Horne wrote:
StatHaldol wrote:
I am assisting a neighbor with an estate sale. The
estate includes two Hammarlund radios. One is a Model
SP 600, the other is an HQ 170A. I don't know the
condition of the radios. There are also approximately
2,100 radio tubes still in the box. The owner passed
away a couple of weeks ago. He was in the radio/TV
business for years. He was 91 years old.
He also has two oscilloscopes, various testing meter
equipment.
Please let me know if you are interested and I will
send a link to photos of the radios.
Mike
Farmerville Louisiana


Mike,

I suggest you do these things first:

1. Do a search on closed auctions in Ebay, and get an
average price for the radios before you consider any
offers. Be sure to check if the HQ-170A has the
"VHF" converter(s) in it, since they add a lot
to the value.
2. Have a local ham or TV repair shop check the units out:
you'll get a lot more for them if they've been serviced
and are guaranteed to be working.
3. Since TV repairmen often put old tubes in new boxes,
separate the "New Old Stock" tubes from the pulls.
4. Make a list of the new vs. the pulled tubes, and ask
around to find if any are extraordinarily valuable. If
not, it'll be easier to sell them as a lot instead of
one-by-one.
5. Consult a tax adviser to find out if the estate would
benefit more by donating some or all of the equipment
to a local ham club or school radio club.

I hope this helps.

Bill, W1AC

(Filter noise from my address for direct replies)



Thanks Bill!
Here are two links to the radios, tubes and other equipment!
http://pictures.aol.com/galleries/mikeb55946

http://good-times.webshots.com/album...ExmVJ?start=12
Thanks,
Mike

  #4   Report Post  
Old March 1st 07, 09:30 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Oct 2006
Posts: 527
Default Hammarlund Radios...


"StatHaldol" wrote in message
ups.com...
On Feb 28, 9:37 pm, Bill Horne
wrote:
StatHaldol wrote:
I am assisting a neighbor with an estate sale. The
estate includes two Hammarlund radios. One is a Model
SP 600, the other is an HQ 170A. I don't know the
condition of the radios. There are also approximately
2,100 radio tubes still in the box. The owner passed
away a couple of weeks ago. He was in the radio/TV
business for years. He was 91 years old.
He also has two oscilloscopes, various testing meter
equipment.
Please let me know if you are interested and I will
send a link to photos of the radios.
Mike
Farmerville Louisiana


Mike,

I suggest you do these things first:

1. Do a search on closed auctions in Ebay, and get an
average price for the radios before you consider any
offers. Be sure to check if the HQ-170A has the
"VHF" converter(s) in it, since they add a lot
to the value.
2. Have a local ham or TV repair shop check the units
out:
you'll get a lot more for them if they've been
serviced
and are guaranteed to be working.
3. Since TV repairmen often put old tubes in new boxes,
separate the "New Old Stock" tubes from the pulls.
4. Make a list of the new vs. the pulled tubes, and ask
around to find if any are extraordinarily valuable.
If
not, it'll be easier to sell them as a lot instead of
one-by-one.
5. Consult a tax adviser to find out if the estate would
benefit more by donating some or all of the equipment
to a local ham club or school radio club.

I hope this helps.

Bill, W1AC

(Filter noise from my address for direct replies)



Thanks Bill!
Here are two links to the radios, tubes and other
equipment!
http://pictures.aol.com/galleries/mikeb55946

http://good-times.webshots.com/album...ExmVJ?start=12
Thanks,
Mike


FWIW, the SP-600 is the JX-17 version, as it should say
on the label on top of the tuning unit. Its had what is
called the IF gain modification but the card holder, located
between the dials, has fallen off or been removed (its glued
on). The red knobs are exclusive to this model.
If you are lucky it will have a top and bottom cover,
they are often missing.


--
---
Richard Knoppow
Los Angeles, CA, USA





--
Posted via a free Usenet account from
http://www.teranews.com

  #5   Report Post  
Old March 2nd 07, 12:44 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 134
Default Hammarlund Radios...

2. Have a local ham or TV repair shop check the units out:

Or simply sell them as-is and let the buyer do the restoration. Most
shoppers at the typical estate sale are not hams or "radio people" and may
not even recognize what these things are. Unless you find a way to publicize
your sale to some kind of radio community, you might not find anyone
interested in buying, period. Whether the radio works or not would be
immaterial to a shopper looking for glassware or collectible toys. And a
serious radio buyer would understand that every radio of that vintage needs
some routine service before being played regularly.

For what it's worth, I sold a very nice Hammarlund HQ-170C a couple of years
ago for around $200. Again, it's a pretty narrow-interest receiver. Ham
bands only -- no shortwave, no standard broadcast band, so it wouldn't
interest the general public unless you find a dealer who plans to resell it
on eBay.

Consult a tax adviser to find out if the estate would
benefit more by donating some or all of the equipment
to a local ham club or school radio club.


Or radio collector club. Check the list at
http://www.antiqueradio.com/clublist.html to see if there's a club anywhere
in your vicinity.

To get a tax benefit from donation, you need to be able to verify the fair
market price of each item, and also make sure that the organization
qualifies for tax-deductible donations (the organization should be able to
tell you).

You could also ask the club to notify their members that the sale is coming
up.

Regarding the tubes, if you can connect with a nearby club, maybe someone
there could stop by and eyeball the collection, to give you some rough clue
what they're worth. A lot of the tubes used in 1950s/1960s receivers are
still very common and not worth a heck of a lot, even if new. And as noted
earlier, radio servicemen were notorious for sticking dead or half-dead
tubes into the boxes after installing a new tube. So unless you have a
sealed box that obviously was never opened, you have to either assume the
tube is used, or go through the process of testing it.

There are earlier tube types, such as 45 or 1L6, that are worth more, but of
course they are scarcer. Most TV tubes are still available new in vast
quantities and worth almost nothing. But there are a few exceptions. If you
have a type 15GP22 color TV picture tube, I'd be interested in that, for
example, but they were scarce when new and few if any exist at this time,
outside of the original TVs that they came in.

Some suppliers, such as Antique Electronic Supply,
http://www.tubesandmore.com/ , do buy old stocks of tubes for resale. You
could get some idea of what yours are worth by looking at their website. Of
course, they would offer you a wholesale price rather than the retail price
shown on their site.

Regards,

Phil Nelson




  #6   Report Post  
Old March 2nd 07, 04:01 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 198
Default Hammarlund Radios...


"Phil Nelson" wrote in message
...
2. Have a local ham or TV repair shop check the units out:


Or simply sell them as-is and let the buyer do the restoration. Most
shoppers at the typical estate sale are not hams or "radio people" and may
not even recognize what these things are. Unless you find a way to
publicize your sale to some kind of radio community, you might not find
anyone interested in buying, period. Whether the radio works or not would
be immaterial to a shopper looking for glassware or collectible toys. And
a serious radio buyer would understand that every radio of that vintage
needs some routine service before being played regularly.

For what it's worth, I sold a very nice Hammarlund HQ-170C a couple of
years ago for around $200. Again, it's a pretty narrow-interest receiver.
Ham bands only -- no shortwave, no standard broadcast band, so it wouldn't
interest the general public unless you find a dealer who plans to resell
it on eBay.

Consult a tax adviser to find out if the estate would
benefit more by donating some or all of the equipment
to a local ham club or school radio club.


Or radio collector club. Check the list at
http://www.antiqueradio.com/clublist.html to see if there's a club
anywhere in your vicinity.

To get a tax benefit from donation, you need to be able to verify the fair
market price of each item, and also make sure that the organization
qualifies for tax-deductible donations (the organization should be able to
tell you).

You could also ask the club to notify their members that the sale is
coming up.

Regarding the tubes, if you can connect with a nearby club, maybe someone
there could stop by and eyeball the collection, to give you some rough
clue what they're worth. A lot of the tubes used in 1950s/1960s receivers
are still very common and not worth a heck of a lot, even if new. And as
noted earlier, radio servicemen were notorious for sticking dead or
half-dead tubes into the boxes after installing a new tube. So unless you
have a sealed box that obviously was never opened, you have to either
assume the tube is used, or go through the process of testing it.

There are earlier tube types, such as 45 or 1L6, that are worth more, but
of course they are scarcer. Most TV tubes are still available new in vast
quantities and worth almost nothing. But there are a few exceptions. If
you have a type 15GP22 color TV picture tube, I'd be interested in that,
for example, but they were scarce when new and few if any exist at this
time, outside of the original TVs that they came in.

Some suppliers, such as Antique Electronic Supply,
http://www.tubesandmore.com/ , do buy old stocks of tubes for resale. You
could get some idea of what yours are worth by looking at their website.
Of course, they would offer you a wholesale price rather than the retail
price shown on their site.

Regards,

Phil Nelson


If he has some audio tubes in there? He may be able to unload them rather
easily. 6L6, 12AX7, 6V6 etc...

BH


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Hammarlund HQ-170 SR Shortwave 43 October 5th 05 11:06 PM
Got my Kaito today Ryan Shortwave 31 May 3rd 05 05:35 PM
FS MOTOROLA RADIOS HT1000'S , VISAR'S ,& MAXTRAC'S John Swap 0 January 19th 04 06:50 AM
FS MOTOROLA RADIOS HT1000'S , VISAR'S ,& MAXTRAC'S John Equipment 0 January 19th 04 06:44 AM
FS MOTOROLA RADIO'S HT1000's,VISAR'S,& MAXTRAC'S John Swap 0 January 17th 04 06:24 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:54 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017