Tappan wall ovens - Bloomfield Hills MI

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At least it's not on a scrap metal ship to China.

Anthony, please be careful when working on that microwave. I can think of about 6 ways it will try to kill a person. Even if it was "working when removed" that power supply section should be rebuilt before putting back into service. Leakage checked around the door and cutout switches cleaned and adjusted. The caps should be reformed and insulation tested in the HV section. Unlike an old TV, there is no current limiting should you get on the HV.
 
At least it's not on a scrap metal ship to China.

Yes I'm am cerantly rebuilding the power sappy and recap. Two of the 866A reflector tubes are bad. And the switches have been replaced at some point of time by a hack! Along with the timers it made me shake my head. It has a build date of March 7 1957.
 
some before/after or both photos during restoration...

Anthony - at the least, post some pics of what you've done either during, after or both processes of restoration.

If not, maybe you could post some pics after it's completed and then installed. I'm not a licensed electrician, but would be interested in seeing what's inside before and after.

Otherwise, maybe a shot of it installed in your kitchen?

good luck

Phil
 
before/after or both photos

Will do Phil! It is apart and half cleaned now. 0400 comes up quick! I will post some pics tomorrow.

Anthony
 
866 rectifier tubes-mercury vapor at that--never thought those would be used in a microwave oven-but makes sense-the earliest ones made before solid state rectifiers became common.The 866 tubes are still available for a price-ham radio suppliers comes to mind-and suppliers of industrial/transmitting tubes.Remember the 866 tubes in the bias supplies-3 phase at that in older RCA TV transmitters.They are also used in the RCA low level stages.and there are solid state plug in replacements if you don't want to pay the price for actual "tubes".
 


I have tubes on the way and would like to keep the tubes seeing as I have several tube amps/radios a have built. When I was young my grandpa and I would work on his ham radio and other stuff. He was a radio repairman on a ship in ww2. After he got back he set up almost all of the radio equipment in the towers for the DNR here in northern MI.
 
1958 Tappan Electronic Oven

Cool oven Anthony, I have a 1958 Westinghouse oven that is built by Tappan and other than a few small styling details should be exactly the same oven. The one I have I have not tried to power up yet and will not do so until I check it over pretty carefully, I will be very interested to hear how yours checks out. Pictures are always great also, if you did through the archives you can probably find pictures of the two I have, both are WH, the other is a 1962 model that is very different in construction, but looks about the same on the outside.

John L.
 
Anthony, Excellent photos! Great to see the power supply and the magnetron of this old unit.

Looks like one of your 866 rectifier tubes is a bit low on Mercury... You can still find them though, some of the old boat-anchor radio folks have horded them. In today's world I'd be tempted to to replace them with silicon rectifiers. They don't have the nostalgia of the tubes but if you plan to use the oven maybe it would be for the best.

Do you have a schematic of the microwave and power supply?

As always be wary of this monster, there are some scary/lethal voltages in there!
 

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