Porta Fi
I have two GE consoles and several porta fi transmitters and remote speakers. Only one console at a time can be connected to the house wiring via the transmitter, as all the transmitters I have are the same channel/frequency (GE labels them channel A or B). Connecting two or more transmitters of the same frequency cancels out the signals. GE offered two frequencies in case your neighbor using the same transfomrer on the power pole a house or two away also was using Porta Fi.
Most of my remote speakers use tube circuits. I have one that is solid state and one that is bi, as it has a switch to select channel A or channel B. The early transmitters were tube type, but mine are all solid state. I find that the speakers work best when they are on the same circuit (breaker) as the console transmitter. The further you go in the house (onto different circuits), the more static there is. My garage has the main power panel, and the house now has a sub panel. The signal is too weak to make it through the sub panel into the garage outlets. Also, use of power strips that are surge protected totally filters out the signal.
The sound at the Porta Fi speaker I primarily use is very clear, but all Porta Fi output is mono, even though the console is stereo. One of my GE consoles has a porta fi control switch, so you could listen to one input, like the radio in the living room, and the record player on the porta fi speaker in another room. GE seems to have deleted the selector switch feature around 1966. From the vintage ads I have seen, Porta Fi began around 1958 and faded away around 1972.
My parents had a GE console, which is the main reason I have collected them, and it had the Porta Fi switch. Unfortunately, they did not buy the transmitter or Porta Fi speakers and as a kid, I never knew what that switch was for. It is very cool to show it off to house guests now. Most are amazed that this technology was around 50 years ago.
Oh, and this technology really got it start on sound equipment with jukeboxes in the 30's. Remote selectors used the electrical wiring in the cafe or bar to send signals to a receiver in the juke box for selections and some units also sent the sound over the wiring to remote speakers plugged in around the establishment. Recent articles in Always Jukin' covered the restoration of this equipment. Very detailed reading for those interested. You can find back issues at
www.alwaysjukin.com
BTW, this pic is a couple years old, and the Pioneer RT909 is now with a Spec 1 and Spec 2 unit rack mounted in the game/laundry room off the garage.
Mike
http://www.alwaysjukin.com
