With all the discussion of old televisions, let me add hotel televisions. The TV in my den is a hotel model. I had a ten year association with a hotel/convention center. One of the owners gave our business a new set when they were changing out the rooms. It came home when the hotel went out of business. It's a late nineties vintage Phillips with a "smart plug" RJ-45 jack for Lodgenet. To access the menu you have to punch the volume, channel and power buttons in a certain order.
Twenty years ago my uncle salvaged a seventies vintage RCA Mural TV. It had been sitting in the elements. He allowed the snow to melt and the set to dry out before determining a resistor was bad. It was replaced. The cabinet was faded and the speaker cover was missing but the set functioned for years.
Twenty years ago my uncle salvaged a seventies vintage RCA Mural TV. It had been sitting in the elements. He allowed the snow to melt and the set to dry out before determining a resistor was bad. It was replaced. The cabinet was faded and the speaker cover was missing but the set functioned for years.