Or, Memories of a 60’s Kid.
For me, it was early on.
I grew up in the 60’s-70’s and was born in 1956.
Pacific Northwest.
Of course in my early years, everything was powered by tubes.
TV, Radio, everything.
Even your precious VTVM meter that was very accurate.
When your TV went on the fritz, you pulled every tube out of the set and took them in a brown paper bag to the closest
place that sold tubes. (usually the nearest grocery store or pharmacy)
You tested each one and replaced any suspects. (if the needle was in the red, you bought new tubes)
When you got back home you installed all the tubes back into their perspective sockets and with crossed fingers you pushed the on switch.
Then if everything is ok, you move on.
Since the TV was the biggest tube user in the average home, it was also the most costly to maintain.
I accompanied my late father many times when a vacuum tube was suspect.
If you were lucky it was one tube that was bad.
Medium bad was when it was more than one tube.
My dad always thought the tube testers were rigged so you would buy more tubes.
It is really bad when the picture tube is bad.
My dad determined that the picture tube in our Zenith black and white set was bad.
He got the new CRT and when he was carrying it into the living room he bumped the neck into
the doorway.
Of course it lost vacuum and destroyed the picture Tube!
I never heard my dad cuss as much before or since that incident!:shock:
It was like Christmas Story!
My dad was pretty smart/ handy, but not a brain surgeon.
Miraculously, the TV it was working again a couple days later, but I suspected a trained TV repairman was
involved.
Just like years before with the radio, families gathered around the boob tube and watched things together in the evenings.
Color TV was still years away, at least for us.
I bought my first guitar tube amp when I was 14. (so around 1970)
My sister co-signed.
It was a Sunn.
It was repossessed.
Anybody else remember stuff like that?
Or should I fade into obscurity?
But wait, there's more......
I actually like stories from other people experiences.