Name: | Lissen Ltd.; London and Richmond, Surrey (GB) |
Abbreviation: | lissen |
Products: | Model types Others Tube manufacturer |
Summary: |
Lissen Ltd., 16-20 Woodger Road, Goldhawk Road, Shepherd's Bush, London W12, was founded in 1923 by Thomas Noah Cole. This address is found in an ad in Modern Wireless of October 1923. Other address: Lissen Ltd., 18-22 Friars Lane, Richmond, Surrey. |
Founded: | 1923 |
Closed: | 1946 |
Production: | 1923 - 1941 |
History: |
Initially Lissen Ltd. manufactured radio components and supplied complete kits for home construction of radio receivers. The Company was purchased by Ever Ready in 1928, and in the following year entered the valve business.
In the earlier years they sold probably only redundant stocks from BTH and Edison Swan but may have fitted their own bases. In later years the valves were from different British and foreign sources. They produced parts, kits, cabinets and complete radio sets till 1934 / 1935, when Cole left to run Vidor / Burndept. Most models from 1935 to 1941 were also produced as Ever Ready branded sets, often with a different cabinet and sometimes with brackets to move two controls. Many models from 1935 to 1938 used Pye chassis, though it's not clear if it was more than the metal work. Different models often shared the same metal chassis, even with different types or numbers of valves. At least one factory was burnt down in the Blitz in 1941. From 1942 onwards only Ever Ready branding was used and only variations of the 1939 all dry portable produced, either due to destruction of London factories or wartime shortages. All Ever Ready production after 1941 was outside London. The Ever Ready parent company wound up Lissen just after WWII, though production branded Lissen seems to have ceased 5 years earlier. There were only battery Ever Ready models after 1941. Only the 1950s BEREC Fiesta had a mains as well as battery after 1941. Like the 1935 to 1941 Ever Ready, most Lissen models only had the model number on the guarantee card, not on the chassis or rear plate. Some models from 1939 had the name, but not model number on the tuning scale. There is no correspondance between Lissen and Ever Ready model numbers, though from 1939 the last couple of digits are sometimes the same. Equivalents are listed on Trader Service sheets for some models. Not all models were released both on Lissen and Ever Ready badges, especially in 1935 (the first Ever Ready year). |
This manufacturer was suggested by Konrad Birkner † 12.08.2014.
Country | Year | Name | 1st Tube | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
GB | 34 | All-Electric Three | AC/SGV | Speaker leads are long enough to test the chassis outside with the speaker remaining in... |
GB | 32 | Lissenola 3-Valve Receiver | Advertised with a matching (sold separately) Lissenola Cabinet Cone Loudspeaker. Mahogany ... | |
GB | 24 | Lissen Crystal Set | Swinging copper discs at the plug-in coil provided tuning (by Eddy-current principle); ... | |
GB | 32 | Two Valve AC Receiver | AC/HL | Art Deco "Egyptian Temple" style cabinet. Also DC version. 6.3V 300mA lamp to... |
GB | 32 | Two Valve DC Receiver | "Egyptian Temple" syle bakelite cabinet. See similar AC model Controls are on... | |
GB | 32–35 | Skyscraper 3 8024 | SG215 | This kit included the cabinet but not the Cone Speaker (likely Magnetic Reed) of the 80... |
GB | 32–35 | Skyscraper 3 8025 | SG215 | There were three versions of the kit sold 8013 Skyscraper 3 chassis only ... |
GB | 33 | 8039 | MM4V | Art Deco cabinet. MM4V 354V PM24A These are Mullard valve types listed as equiv... |
GB | 36 | 8214 | A80A | Fixed IF reaction and triode detector. As with the identical chassis Ever Ready 501... |
GB | 24 | Coil socket | ||
GB | 24 | Plug-in Coil Lissenagon | choice of several sizes from 25 to 300 turns. Also with one or two tappings. The double ta... | |
GB | 35 | 8109 | K80A |
Further details for this manufacturer by the members (rmfiorg):
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Lissen Background and 1940s
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Michael Watterson
29.Jul.12 |
1
See this article about the Model C background and "All Dry" Models of 1939 to 1949 It outlines the connection with Ever Ready and BEREC. T. N. Cole who founded Lissen, created Vidor in 1934 and all connection with Lissen / Ever Ready ended by 1935 with a "just before court case" settlement with Ever Ready. |
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