"My dad was learning to be a tv repair man and therefore we had 2 tvs, both of them being in our living room."
How did your dad do financially, Michael? The local TV repairman was a very important person in most communities. Electronic devices in those days were comparatively expensive to buy, so most people repaired them, rather than just throwing them away like we do these days.
In the late 50s and 60s, TVs cost the modern equivalent of many thousands of dollars. so when your TV went on the fritz - you didn't replace it , you repaired it. I remember that my parents' original TV - a 23 inch RCA black-and-white console - had at least 2 picture tubes over the 12 years or so that they owned it. In the LA suburb where I grew up (population 25,000), there were at least 3 or 4 TV repairmen who stayed very busy.
The TVs were powered by vacuum tubes, which would burn out frequently. If you were mechanically proficient, you unscrewed the back of your TV, removed the tubes, and took them down to your local electronic store for testing - then you'd replace them yourself. But if you were technologically clueless - like my parents; you didn't replace them yourself , you called the TV repairman, and he made a house call.
The last hurrah for TV repairman was the early VCR era in the early 1980s. In those days, VCRs cost about $800 (maybe the equivalent to $1600 these days), so a trip to the VCR repairman was essential every few months for a cleaning and service...about $45 as I remember. Once VCRs dropped under $100, there was no point repairing them, you just threw them away.
My current DVD player cost under $40, and it works great...I haven't made the switch to Blue Ray yet.
How did your dad do financially, Michael? The local TV repairman was a very important person in most communities. Electronic devices in those days were comparatively expensive to buy, so most people repaired them, rather than just throwing them away like we do these days.
In the late 50s and 60s, TVs cost the modern equivalent of many thousands of dollars. so when your TV went on the fritz - you didn't replace it , you repaired it. I remember that my parents' original TV - a 23 inch RCA black-and-white console - had at least 2 picture tubes over the 12 years or so that they owned it. In the LA suburb where I grew up (population 25,000), there were at least 3 or 4 TV repairmen who stayed very busy.
The TVs were powered by vacuum tubes, which would burn out frequently. If you were mechanically proficient, you unscrewed the back of your TV, removed the tubes, and took them down to your local electronic store for testing - then you'd replace them yourself. But if you were technologically clueless - like my parents; you didn't replace them yourself , you called the TV repairman, and he made a house call.
The last hurrah for TV repairman was the early VCR era in the early 1980s. In those days, VCRs cost about $800 (maybe the equivalent to $1600 these days), so a trip to the VCR repairman was essential every few months for a cleaning and service...about $45 as I remember. Once VCRs dropped under $100, there was no point repairing them, you just threw them away.
My current DVD player cost under $40, and it works great...I haven't made the switch to Blue Ray yet.