The TV looks like a cross between these two TV sets (click on the links):
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=3320&item=5785454216&rd=1&ssPageName=WDVW
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=15081&item=5785646008&rd=1&ssPageName=WDVW
The TV is totally solid state and has no CATV type connector on the back; it's definitely a 13" screen. I found a GE TV brochure from 1984 and it looks quite similar to a 13" TV in the brochure.
> > I just purchased a used General Electric TV at a church
> > market and would like to know the approximate date of its
> > manufacture as its date tag on the back is not there. The
> > TV's date tag is missing on the back cover; however, I
> have
> > the following information to help determine the model
> year:
> > the model number is NAA5901WD, the chassis is AA-E, the TV
>
> > is a 13" color set with two seperate VHF/UHF tuners, the
> > cabinet is woodgrained with black trim, the back cover
> says
> > "The attractive cabinet of this television receiver is
> made
> > of molded plastic Polymers to provide the ultimate in
> > sculptured beauty", and on the front it says "Performance
> > Television" with the familiar blue color GE logo and words
>
> > General Electric. Made in College Park, Portsmouth,
> > Virginia 23705. Any idea of the dat of manufacture?
> >
>
> With out seeing it, it's a little hard to tell what you
> have, but I think you will find that it is actually a 10"
> set. I believe it was generically called a "10AA-E."
>
> If it's what I think it is, GE brought this small portable
> color TV to market about the fall of 1966 and sold it
> through the rest of the decade in various trim and color
> schemes. It was quite revolutionary in it's day, probably
> the first small portable color TV. As I recall, it was a
> hybrid set. Mostly tubes with a few solid state devices.
> The picture tube was unusual. Rather than having the red,
> green and blue phosphors arranged in a triangular pattern,
> they were on the screen side by side. This greatly
> simplified convergence, which allowed the set to be very
> compact (and inexpensive) for its day. It was quite
> reasonably priced, about $199.00 retail, in an era when
> RCA's cheapest set was about $350.00. Keep in mind that
> $2.25 - $2.50 per hour was pretty good pay back then.
> $10,000 per year was a dream job. By the late 1960's, there
> were several "reasonably priced" color TV's which did a lot
> to put a color set in every home.
>