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Bush Continued
Shown left is the Bush DAC90A from 1950, probably the
single most successful radio of the 1950’s.
The set first appeared as the DAC90 in 1946, and was featured in the
“Britain Can Make It” exhibition held that year. The DAC90 underwent various minor changes over the years, and
became the DAC90A in 1950. The
DAC90 first appeared with cloth grille, which  changed
to gold expanded metal in about 1948. The
tuning control was on the side of the cabinet in the DAC90, moving to right hand
front in the DAC90A, a worthwhile improvement.
Designed by Frank Middleditch, the set was also available in black and cream cabinets.
The DAC90A is generally considered the more usable receiver of the two
models, as it tends to run cooler. Inspection
of the card back of the DAC90 will almost always reveal much of the card
disintegrated from heat caused by the octal valves and the mains dropper and
their close proximity to the top and back of the cabinet. The DAC90A used
smaller glass valves with B8A bases. Valve line-up for DAC90A is UCH42, UF41, UBC41, UL41, UY41.
The cream urea cabinets are particularly prone to cracking on the top caused by
heat build-up, and the crack is always obvious because soot and dust from the
valves seems to permeate the crack to form dark lines. It is a design classic
nonetheless, and in spite of the fact they are very common, pretty much every
vintage radio collector wants to own one, so they normally sell for at least £50,
and often more than £100. The
cream models are always worth at least 50% more than their brown cousins,
depending upon the degree of heat cracking to the top of the cabinet. Why are they so popular?
Once repaired they always seem to work reliably, and the repairs are
often quite simple. Routine
replacement of all capacitors is not generally needed on these sets. They are also popular abroad too, particularly in Japan.
Indeed one company in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s used to crate
up dozens at a time and export them to Japan. Original
cost of DAC90A was £12.1.8 in brown and £12.16.9 in cream, both plus p.t.
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