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Murphy Radio 1933
For 1933 Murphy
introduced the model A4 (and derivatives D4 for DC mains and battery
set B5). This A4 was an AC Table
superhet costing £14.10.0. It was
available in a Walnut cabinet inlaid with rosewood designed by R.D.Russell. This
set included a high quality back (shown right), rather than the hardboard seen
on the A3. It can be noted that the wood frame has been stained and cloth
provided for ventilation. A metal plate is provided on the back and the chassis
giving the model and serial number information. Also shown is the Murphy
Technical Notes booklet for the receiver. A
paragraph on page 5 informs service engineers that care should be taken to
ensure the same chassis is returned to the correct cabinet if two or more
receivers are dismantled at the same time. The booklet warns that tuning calibration may be compromised
if cabinets are swapped as the cursor remains in the cabinet and not on the
chassis. This seems somewhat
unlikely though since a greater margin for error would surely result from the
position of the chassis itself even in its original cabinet. Murphy themselves appear to realise this since the same
warning appears a year later in the A24 Technical Notes,
but the reference to tuning accuracy has disappeared. The insert picture shows
the control knob fixing method for the receiver, which was unique to Murphy. Right from the early days Frank Murphy pursued excellence in
quality of build, even if it meant having parts made especially. Most
manufacturers of the time fixed their control knobs with a small grub screw,
which had the disadvantage that the grub screw became “chewed up” and
difficult to remove after a while. However Murphy’s method of using a threaded
nut securing the knob meant that all the knobs could be removed and refitted
speedily without the use of a screwdriver, (providing
the securing nut was not lost!). The
major disadvantage was that all the controls required specially threaded shafts,
which made for difficulties when fitting replacement parts.
The idea was discontinued during 1937 and Murphy went over to the more
usual grub screw fixing. Murphy was noted for a different approach to
advertising, and an advertisement run in 1933 for the A4 and A8 receivers
epitomises this by using unemployment as the reason to buy.
It listed several observations on the nature of unemployment and how the
purchaser could potentially help by buying a set now.
For example one line from the ad reads “There is no point in waiting if
you want a Murphy set, for we will bring out no new models nor will we reduce
our prices during 1933” The valve line up used was AC/PEN, AC/SGVM, AC/HL,
AC/PEN, 1807.
Full range introduced from 1933
| A4 |
AC Superhet Table Set |
£14.10.0 |
Fig 1 |
| D4 |
DC/AC Superhet Table Set |
£14.10.0 |
Fig 1 |
| B5 |
Battery Superhet Table Set |
£14.10.0 |
Fig 1 |
(Also A8 continued from 1932)

Fig
1
Continue to 1934
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