Was over at dads tonight and he said our 65 Parisienne had a wonderbar radio...I kinda of recall it,but not really....if that makes any sense? Anyone heard of or have such a thing..thinking rare.rare option! Our Caddy's had them but a Parisienne?
This was a 65 Parisienne. I know we have pics in an old photo album...just not sure if we have interior pics. Thing was...mom remembers it having the wonderbar radio...not going to second guess mom and dad!!!
-- Edited by hawkeye5766 on Tuesday 4th of December 2018 01:39:28 AM
I had a 57 Chev BelAir hardtop that had an original Wonder Bar radio. It had a very large second section to it under the dash that had tubes in it. The bar at the top of the radio actually said Wonder Bar on it and you pushed it in to activate the signal seeking. The only Wonder Bar i have ever owned and i always thought it was really cool for a fifties car.
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1957 Pontiac Pathfinder Deluxe sedan restored 261 six
1974 Chevrolet Caprice Estate wagon low mileage original 400 V-8
I kind of think I remember a conversation about my great uncle having a 1960 Parisienne with a wonderbar radio. Car was gone before my time so I cannot confirm
-- Edited by hawkeye5766 on Tuesday 4th of December 2018 01:39:28 AM
Oh I don't doubt it for a second. I am willing to bet very few people ordered one.
It seems to be that GM had a floor button to search for stations in some of the earlier ones, maybe in the 50's? I think the button looked like a dimmer switch button. Anyone else seen that, or am I dreaming?
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1966 Strato Chief 2 door, 427 4 speed, 45,000 original miles
1966 Grande Parisienne, 396 1 of 23 factory air cars
-- Edited by hawkeye5766 on Tuesday 4th of December 2018 01:39:28 AM
Oh I don't doubt it for a second. I am willing to bet very few people ordered one.
It seems to be that GM had a floor button to search for stations in some of the earlier ones, maybe in the 50's? I think the button looked like a dimmer switch button. Anyone else seen that, or am I dreaming?
A buddy of mine is into early 50's Buick's, and has a 52 Buick woody wagon in his collection. It was just featured on a show on the french channel Unis, a show called Histoires de chars. He has a Wonderbar radio in that car.
My first 58 Parisienne that I purchased in 1960 had a wonderbar AM radio. The person l bought it from said she had ordered it along with the rear seat speaker. It apparently came from the factory that way. I have since purchased a wonderbar from the states for my current 58 Parisienne since I was trying to duplicate my first car. It plays sometimes but does needs some repairs. More for just a conversation piece when car is on display. The 58 Cadillac that I sold back in March had a wonderbar radio which was the only radio available and it had a button on the floor like a dimmer switch that you could change stations with. The buyer was really taken by this feature as they both worked. Bob.
-- Edited by 58 poncho fan on Tuesday 4th of December 2018 09:13:16 AM
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1965 Thunderbird Special Landau 10th Anniversary Limited Edition only 4500 built 34,800 miles
I have heard of the "wonderbar radio" before, but never knew what they were - thank you to Robert for sharing those videos!
The third video shows a radio which has provisions in the form of other buttons to program the preset stations - how do the others work?
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1970 Formula 400 Carousel Red on black (std) interior "no drivetrain option" car (same base drivetrain as GTO) 1:411 1970 Firebird Formulas originally sold in Canada
Thanks Todd. Not very financially rewarding. People will spend $10,000 on a paint job but balk at a $300 repair bill on a radio needing $100 worth of parts and a few weekends to repair. Pre 1959 Wonderbars can be quite involved and have multiple faults. I just do it as I love it...
Jonny, the Buick and the Cadillac haven't pre-sets. Round and round you go... The oldest wonderbar with pre-sets that I have worked on was for a '54 Fleetwood.
I have an 1937 Floor model Westinghouse radio with a preset feature. I've had 2 antique radio guys get the radio working (one when I bought it over 30 years ago and another a year ago) but neither could figure out how the presets work. Too bad you are so far away. I'm sure you could sort it out.
-- Edited by Canadian Poncho on Tuesday 4th of December 2018 02:52:09 PM
I have an 1937 Floor model Westinghouse radio with a preset feature. I've had 2 antique radio guys get the radio working (one when I bought it over 30 years ago and another a year ago) but neither could figure out how the presets work. Too bad you are so far away. I'm sure you could sort it out.
-- Edited by Canadian Poncho on Tuesday 4th of December 2018 02:52:09 PM
Todd,
My sister has a 1939 Zenith floor model radio with presets. It was in the family since the early 60's
I seem to remember reading somewhere that some radios had the mechanical lever style presets.....
set the station you want and pull the preset button and push to activate (like the old car radios.
Here's a link to The Perpetual Troubleshooters Manual.
published from 1931 - 1954.
Rider worked with many radio manufacturers as possible to get servicing information that was available so the yearly bound
volumes were large,sometimes 2000 pages.
Manufactureres were mainly represented from the United States. http://highgate.comm.sfu.ca/oldradio/
I know it would not be "correct" but one could potentially swap and cut out the face on the olds radio as well as swapping out the push buttons to make it look closer. Would take a little bit, but I think it could be done w/out cutting the dash. www.ebay.com/itm/LATE-1960s-1970s-OLDS-WONDER-BAR-AM-FM-RADIO/123518002089
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63 Grand Prix -needs restoration, 65 Catalina Ventura 4 speed - resto almost completed, 66 Catalina Convertible - at body shop