I just found a very old jensen speaker in an antique radio. I have searched online for info but I haven't find anything. What do you think? Is it worth anything?
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Nice radio!
Leave it intact- the radio isn't worth as much without the speaker and the speaker isn't valuable without the radio. That said, do a search to determine the radio's value- Facebook has several antique radio groups and they can tell you about the radio just by looking at it.
That speaker probably won't work on a modern system- it's called a 'field coil speaker' because it has a coil around the voice coil to provide the magnetic field that causes the cone to move. The field coil would eventually be replaced by permanent magnets when the technology allowed. It also has an output transformer, which is needed to provide a usable load for the amp.
Look for a single RCA jack on the rear- many old radios had an input for a turntable you can buy a summing adapter if you want to use this with a smart phone or BT receiver. Just make sure to service it before using if the electrolytic capacitors haven't been replaced. Also, some of these don't have a power transformer and they're not the safest things on the planet. Look for an antique radio group for info and they can get you going, safely.
Also, look for a six digit code on the speaker frame- this is a date code with the first three characters showing who made it. 220 is Jensen's EIA code, the next two are for the week of manufacture and the last digit shows the year. If the speaker, caps and/or controls are original, you can determine when the radio was made- if the controls have 137 as the first three digits, they were made by CTS and if they have 304, they were made by Stackpole. The last digits show the week and year.
The EIA codes were used to provide manufacturer info after the start of WWII, so the military could keep track of their inventory and gather other info WRT reliability, inventory age, etc.