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Museum buys Baird receiver

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baird-televisor-wireless-wONE of the earliest receivers for Helensburgh inventor John Logie Baird's Television Company sold at Bonhams in Knightsbridge, London, on Tuesday November 18 2008 for £12,000 … four times more than its pre-sale estimate.

The rare wireless, which was able to receive some of the world's first television programmes, was bought by the National Museum of Scotland.

 Alison Taubman, principal curator of communications for the National Museum of Scotland, said after the auction: “We are delighted to have acquired the type A receiver as very few are left in existence. This is an important addition to an already significant collection of Baird material.”

John Logie Baird was the inventor of the world's first working television system. The Baird Televisor, which was the earliest television set to go into production, had no internal receiver and so relied on its connection to a wireless in order to retrieve the Baird Television Company signal.

Early television enthusiasts purchased Televisors to watch the periodic Baird Studios and BBC broadcasts available from 1929 to 1932.

Different models of the Televisor were available, the most expensive of which was the Type C which cost £150. The receiver sold by Bonhams would have been connected to the Type A model, however, which cost £20. The receiver itself would have set its purchaser back £5 9s 6d.

It is not known how many of these Televisor wireless receivers were made, but the number is under 100 and this set is the only known example to appear at auction.

The rare wireless, marketed by the Baird Television Company to receive the Televisor signal, was manufactured between 1929 and1934.

It has twin drum tuning scales, central current dial flanking the horizontal-plane switches for On/Off and Loudspeaker/Televisor, each with large nickel plated impressed metal escutcheons, and twin tap bars for Televisor and loudspeaker connections at the rear.

baird-company-logo-wThe colour ‘Baird Television — The Eye of the World’ company transfer and valve plaque is on the back panel with heat apertures to top.

It is a rich mahogany rectangular cabinet with plain top and moulded edge, slight plinth base with the chassis screws sunken in the four corners — 18.1/4in. (46.3cm) wide, 11.1/2in. (29.2cm) high, 11.1/4in. (28.5cm) deep.

Considering that the price of the best-value Televisor (Baird Model A) in 1928 was £20 and the most wallet-lightening model (Baird Model C) also from 1928 for sale at £150, purchasers would have been not too willing to invest in these specially made Baird wireless receivers, as in most cases their homemade or basic shop-bought wireless would do the same job just as well.

Nevertheless, the Baird Television Company made a few of these sets and tried to offer them as worthwhile accessories to gather more revenue.

Sold separately, this receiver would have been perfect for use with the Daily Express mechanical Televisor kit offer, which sold for £5 9s 6d in 1934.

This original and totally unrestored set comprises the four valve line-up and the transformer tapped at 220v. The first time 30-line signals for both sound and vision transmitted together, was in March 1931 from Brookman's Park (vision 261 metres and sound 365-6 metres).

The circuit in this receiver features separate sound and vision tuning as well as the band filters, prior to the neon input, making line synchronisation reliant just on the Nipkow disc speed control on the Televisor.

This set is the only known example to appear on the open market, and successful attempts have been made by dedicated narrow band-width societies the world over to create reproductions using modern components and going from period photographs and diagrams.

This very scarce set provides an opportunity to see how the original components made this important task possible, and strengthens the development and subsequent conservation of early television technology.

  • The images above have been kindly supplied by Bonhams Press Office, and are copyright 2002-2008 Bonhams 1793 Ltd.
Last Updated ( Saturday, 08 May 2010 14:42 )  

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First winter talk

Glen_Fruin_HBREDavid Norman will speak about Glen Fruin's Little Secret, the Admiralty Hydro Ballistic Research Establishment, on Wednesday September 29 at 7.30pm at Helensburgh Tennis Club, Suffolk Street.

Winter Talks

  • Wednesday September 29 2010 — David Norman: Glen Fruin's Little Secret — A History of AH-BRE.
  • Wednesday October 27 — AGM at 7pm; Stewart Noble: The Vanished Railways of Old Western Dunbartonshire.
  • Wednesday November 24— Fiona Jackson and Sue Furness: The Excavations at High Morlaggan, Arrochar.
  • Wednesday January 26 2011 — David Harvie: Diamonds in the Deli — J.B.Hannay.
  • Wednesday February 23 — Tony Dance: Restoration of the Victoria Hall.
  • Wednesday March 30 — Dr Martin MacGregor: The Battle of Glen Fruin — A MacGregor Perspective.
All meetings held in the upstairs meeting room at Helensburgh Lawn Tennis Club, Suffolk Street,
at 7.30pm

Charity Number

HELENSBURGH HERITAGE TRUST
Scottish Charity
No SC 024603