Old Soviet TV Sets

Old Soviet TV Sets 1

During the Soviet times these TV sets were the principal characters in the flats of the most Soviet families. Some of them still work!





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submitted by Voron

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    2:59 am


    67 Responses to “Old Soviet TV Sets”

    1. M0L0TOV says:

      In Russia, tv watches you!

    2. karp says:

      I had had one of these (16-th from the top) in Poland just after the USSR has collapsed. It worked fine, my parent made a RC to this TV. It works even now at my grandparents’.

    3. aleksi says:

      Nice!

      fuck you “FIRST!” guys

    4. Igor says:

      I wish one day to save up for one of these great futuristic boxes. I been saving for 10 years and still not enough, i lose all my money to vodka and bribing Russian cops

    5. I am says:

      Bayan ! I had one tv like in 8 pic

    6. Diego says:

      The building on the 19th TV set is the same of the Nazi Kharkov post!!

    7. adios says:

      i have Vitiaz’ 6 chanels:P

    8. zafarad says:

      You can`t imagine in the west,that in soviet days Tv sets are the status symbol.but almost all models and brands has limited range of signal reception.because the capitalist devils are try to BRAINWASH soviet peoples.every tv channel broadcast dear leader first secretary`s official meetings and party programme all day.programmes range was very vast,from inauguration ceremony of new type of sewer system,hero of socialist labour who dig coal 20th times higher than average worker,mother of all socialist society who deliver the 9 babies at once,the great inventors who invents tool which is helpful in energizing lazy workers(ass breaker),economic discussions,where communist economists proves the soviet economy was 8th times greater than USA.How golden days were i missed.Fucking capitalists destroy my Utopian world.i hate yankeeism,i love soviet era.

    9. soviet says:

      Try to think the year when each one of those was made, add 20, and you have the right year!

    10. ZEMFIRA RULES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    11. Pavel says:

      I actually have the older version of that little red one. I found it in a highschool dorm in Hungary. It was an awsome little TV.

    12. I have heard that all of the electronic components were manufactured in Russia. Is that true?

      • zafarad says:

        Almost all components were produced in Soviet union.basically two types of electronic components,active and Passive.in active components they produced almost 90% of these components and in passive type they produced 100% of these components indigenously.active means ICs and all family of semiconductors and passive means,inductors,resistors,capisitors,transformers,power supplies etc.but the soviets used their mind very wisely,they copy or reverse engineered western and japanese components and circuits.but soviets failed to reproduced same size as original ones.if you closely look inside the old soviet electronic devices,you will find extra large components,in raw and crude state.but as they successfully done their all jobs,they achieve the desired results from these huge components.

        • Yes. And I also remember some years ago hearing that U.S. experts scoffed at the avionics in the MiG-25 because of it’s use of “outdated vacuum tube technology”. These same “experts” were later embarassed to discover that the Russian equipment had several advantages over western types. Russian electronics could perform flawlessly under the most extreme conditions,including EMP, and could be easily repaired in the field instead of replaced, thus simplifying logistics. They made the same mistake in underestimating Russian turbojet engines. The Russian engines could eat small rocks and other objects without missing a beat. Western engines were vulnerable to the smallest debris requiring that the runways be virtualy swept clean before operations. Since such measures would be impractical under combat conditions, who would have had the advantage?

          • zafarad says:

            You are right,few decade ago a defected Soviet pilot luchenko defect with their MiG 25 Foxbat in japan.Mig 25 was at that time world most secret and advanced plane.US and Japanese Engineers were very keen to see that plane since long time,when they examined and care fully analyze Foxbat,they stunned to see the Huge amount of vacuum tubes and their circuits based on these old technology valves.American were very impressed by using these valves and tubes.despite the big size and required more heat to the tubes,but Soviets control these difficulties.at the same time US and others used semiconductors, they still rely on that.finally government of Japan reassembled that plane and send him with AIRPORT charges and damage penalty of japanese airport! ! ! ! !.

        • Boris says:

          I don’t really agree with your statement: “they achieve the desired results from these huge components.” The characteristics of consumer electronic parts was terrible!

    13. brain master says:

      nice tv collection - i remember a few of them

      In Odessa, if you lived on the “high” floor next to the sea - sometimes you could get stations from Turkey (I am not sure about short range…)

    14. Boris says:

      Reminds me of a Soviet TV set I have used once that had to be hit every 2 minutes for the image to appear (time to replace the ~15 vacuum tubes inside?) and manually calibrated over time (including phase adjustments). The “surge protector” (technical term: autotransformer) for it weighed 10kg and had such a loud hum that you had to turn the volume up to the maximum (the volume control only worked in a few position anyways) and barely received two channels-I had to connect extremely large roof-mounted antennas for it to receive anything (and this in a city!). The “instruction manual” included a full-size schematic of the TV with handwritten internal calibration instructions, printed with what seems to be a 1700s printing press on an old paper towel. Funny thing about the TV is that it worked on 4 different voltages!!!. I once peeked inside and the parts were mounted on sheet metal with a separate metal can for each vacuum tube-it looked like a ww2 military radio transceiver. And the year of manufacture? 1988. I’m sure it was still made until the collapse of the USSR. Surprisingly, it still works (although the image shifts when warming up and during the course of time due to deviating vacuum tube characteristics).

      • angelo says:

        Dear Boris,
        its very interesting to read all these posts;
        I’m Angelo from Italy, I’m collecting old TV sets from around the world and memorabilia about old TV sets. I was recently able to find an old exUSSR TV set from 1956 (model KVN-49.4), this set was USSR made from 1949 to 1962 without big changes, it has a small 18cm diameter screen
        http://www.zilionis.com/oldradio/RUS/kvn-49-4.htm
        This model was made to be very cheep in order to made television popular, a sort of “people’s TV”. It could receive 3 channels and worked on 3 different voltages, the weight is HUGE for such small screen! and by all means you can say that was surely handmade! Would be nice to hear if someone still remember having see this kind of TV working.
        My very best regards and compliments for this nice forum!
        Sincerely Yours, Angelo (Italia)

    15. pLeksi says:

      Gotta love the red one.

    16. [...] wooden box. Looking back on it a lot of early consumer electronics came in those wooden boxes; some beautiful, some not so, but after years of plastic domination, wood is making a comeback. Tree-V from Sweden [...]

    17. Cigarettes says:

      My grandfather had such TV in his old garage. It looks like a antique merchandise.

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