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Beethoven
Shown below is the Beethoven U3138 from 1947.
To be honest I’m not sure that is the correct model number, as there is
no  model number marked on the receiver. This receiver is a 4 valve plus
rectifier set that looks to be AC mains only whereas service data indicates
U3138 to be a 3 valve plus rectifier universal receiver.
Presuming model U3138 is different it obviously used the same cabinet as
my example shown. The cabinet is
really rather good-looking, shown in the very blond veneered wood.
Particularly attractive is the tuning dial, where the wavebands are shown
as music staves. Treble and bass
clefs are included, with the stations being indicated by crotchet and quaver
notes on the staves. The dial
glass
background is largely a pale cream to complement the blond veneer wood, and
unusually the knobs are white instead of the more usual brown or black.
This receiver was probably one of the most visually pleasing receivers
available just after the end of WW II. The
chassis inside the set is pretty much a standard superhet though, and looks to
have been built by Plessey for Beethoven. Particularly
useful from a serviceman’s point of view are the metal supports at either end
of the chassis that enable the underside of the receiver to be worked on without
the need to find workbench support. This
receiver was supplied with Tungsram valves, and they all look to be original
except the EF39 (which was replaced recently). Pretty much all the other
components on the chassis are original too.
The Beethoven Company was actually in right at the start of wireless
manufacture, commencing production at Park Royal, London NW10 in 1925.
However in spite of having a head start on some of the big names like
Ekco and Murphy, Beethoven never did become a serious player in UK radio
manufacture, and their receivers are not too common now. Continue to
British And Overseas Radiovision
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