I found a properly working ivory version of this phone at my grandparent's house that my mom was trying to throw away. Being the vintage lover I am, I decided to keep it. I'm only 16 and don't know how to pop off the centre from experience, so i was looking online for instructions. I believe I did what you said to do in the video, but for some reason the rotary dial didn't pop off.
@carly1535 Some times it is a pain in the ass to get the dial off. Try a few more times and if no aval, look under the dial to look for the tab. Find the tab and bend it down manually with a percision flathead screwdriver, don't worry, if done correctly, you wont jack up the phone in any way. It is good to see the younger generation into vintage telephones. I'm 23 and I use a candlestick telephone from the 1930's. I have a video of it too :)
@RetroVintageItems27 I do use 3 of the lines. I not going to promise anything, but I will try to upload a vid of the telephones. It is a bit hard to get vids up at the moment because I'm running and managing an event company at the moment.
Ok yah, very nice phone I am bidding on a plastic rotary dial with like 5 lines but I only have one. For your 3 lines did you put on a new connector or can you keep your old one?
@RetroVintageItems27 When the telephone was sent to me, someone had a cut pig tail end to the connector to it so I was able to keep the old connector and just build a wiring harness out of it to use on modern RJ11 lines :)
@RetroVintageItems27 I'm guessing that you mean the nmber at the top of the dial card. It is 702, this set was in Las Vegas, and it is kept locally, because I live in Las Vegas :)
Loving seeing you take these things apart. Way back when I was a little kid my grandmother had a telephone repair guy come over and he removed the dial, it seemed to me that he just touched it and it popped off. I got in trouble when I broke it off, trying to get it off. We got a new one after that (still a rotary, though). Good times!
@nathanallan1 LOL, yeah, the dials are a bit tricky to take off of these sets because of that cryptic pin :) It is fun to take them apart and clean them up / repair them, I enjoy it.
I could use some help...
I found a properly working ivory version of this phone at my grandparent's house that my mom was trying to throw away. Being the vintage lover I am, I decided to keep it. I'm only 16 and don't know how to pop off the centre from experience, so i was looking online for instructions. I believe I did what you said to do in the video, but for some reason the rotary dial didn't pop off.
My question is, why won't the centre pop off?
carly1535 7 months ago
@carly1535 Some times it is a pain in the ass to get the dial off. Try a few more times and if no aval, look under the dial to look for the tab. Find the tab and bend it down manually with a percision flathead screwdriver, don't worry, if done correctly, you wont jack up the phone in any way. It is good to see the younger generation into vintage telephones. I'm 23 and I use a candlestick telephone from the 1930's. I have a video of it too :)
hydrolisk1792 7 months ago
Hi,
Also could you do a video of that multiline phone and the 2500??? Do you use all of the 4 or 5 lines, or just 1.
RetroVintageItems27
RetroVintageItems27 8 months ago
@RetroVintageItems27 I do use 3 of the lines. I not going to promise anything, but I will try to upload a vid of the telephones. It is a bit hard to get vids up at the moment because I'm running and managing an event company at the moment.
hydrolisk1792 8 months ago
@hydrolisk1792
Ok yah, very nice phone I am bidding on a plastic rotary dial with like 5 lines but I only have one. For your 3 lines did you put on a new connector or can you keep your old one?
RetroVintageItems27
RetroVintageItems27 8 months ago
@RetroVintageItems27 When the telephone was sent to me, someone had a cut pig tail end to the connector to it so I was able to keep the old connector and just build a wiring harness out of it to use on modern RJ11 lines :)
hydrolisk1792 8 months ago
Hi,
On the white telephone is that 763? Too pixilated...
RetroVintageItems27
RetroVintageItems27 10 months ago
@RetroVintageItems27 I'm guessing that you mean the nmber at the top of the dial card. It is 702, this set was in Las Vegas, and it is kept locally, because I live in Las Vegas :)
hydrolisk1792 10 months ago
Loving seeing you take these things apart. Way back when I was a little kid my grandmother had a telephone repair guy come over and he removed the dial, it seemed to me that he just touched it and it popped off. I got in trouble when I broke it off, trying to get it off. We got a new one after that (still a rotary, though). Good times!
nathanallan1 1 year ago
@nathanallan1 LOL, yeah, the dials are a bit tricky to take off of these sets because of that cryptic pin :) It is fun to take them apart and clean them up / repair them, I enjoy it.
hydrolisk1792 1 year ago
The video won't buffer...but enjoy you're phone. It was amusing the first time I restored one.
silntdoogood 1 year ago
@silntdoogood Won't buffer? It is buffering for me right now. Try again later.
hydrolisk1792 1 year ago