• Year
  • 1955 ??
  • Category
  • Broadcast Receiver - or past WW2 Tuner
  • Radiomuseum.org ID
  • 152731
    • alternative name: RCA Manufacturing || Victor Talking Machine

Click on the schematic thumbnail to request the schematic as a free document.

 Technical Specifications

  • Number of Tubes
  • 7
  • Main principle
  • Superheterodyne (common); ZF/IF 460/10700 kHz
  • Wave bands
  • Broadcast, 2 Short Wave plus FM or UHF.
  • Power type and voltage
  • Alternating Current supply (AC) / 60 Hz, 117V = 110 -120 Volt
  • Loudspeaker
  • 5 Loudspeakers
  • Material
  • Wooden case
  • from Radiomuseum.org
  • Model: 9-INT-1 Ch= RC-1172 - RCA RCA Victor Co. Inc.; New
  • Shape
  • Tablemodel with Push Buttons.
  • Dimensions (WHD)
  • 25.2 x 15 x 12 inch / 640 x 381 x 305 mm
  • Notes
  • RCA International 9-INT-1 High Fidelity;
    Magic Eye tuning indicator tube, bass & treble control, selectivity control: sharp-broad, directional front controlled rotating ferrite rod antenna,
    Coverage: broadcast 510 - 1650 kc,
    SW: 2.2 - 18.5 mc in two bands: 2.2 - 6.5 mc and 6 - 18.5 mc. FM: 88 - 108 mc,
    55 watts power consumption, four antenna screw terminals, phono & tape in, ext. speaker jack,
    The RCA models "9INT1" (table model) and "9INT2" (console) with the same chassis were made in West Germany by Graetz for RCA Victor Radio and "Victrola" Division Camden 8, New Jersey.
  • Author
  • Model page created by a member from A. See "Data change" for further contributors.

 Collections | Museums | Literature

Collections

The model 9-INT-1 is part of the collections of the following members.

 Forum

Forum contributions about this model: RCA RCA Victor Co.: 9-INT-1 Ch= RC-1172

Threads: 2 | Posts: 13

I would like to add a bluetooth receiver like this to the 9 Int 1 as it seems to be the simplest solution.

 

 

The radio has a phono jack and a tape jack. 

My first question is, which jack is the preferred jack to connect to?

If the phono jack is preferable, what type of cable should be used as the phono jack is not a modern RCA jack.  A modern RCA cable does not connect to it properly and the jack is just one input, not 2.  

If the tape jack is preferable, would a din3 cable work?

And for both jacks do I have to be concerned about the receiver being stereo and the radio mono?


Thanks for any help,

 

Mark

Mark Pennington, 08.Dec.20

Weitere Posts (10) zu diesem Thema.

Were these models made by Emud or Philips for RCA?

Attachments

Omer Suleimanagich, 13.Dec.05

Weitere Posts (3) zu diesem Thema.