Sadly, you are a little late to buy one of these fine televisions. They were withdrawn from sale in 1936 when the BBC moved from John Logie Baird's television system to a fully electronic one. There were so few made that finding one for sale is extremely unlikley.
However, the Narrow Bandwidth Television Association is an organization dedicated to early television and can provide support and ideas for obtaining parts or making a Televisor replica. Their web site in in the link below.
The very first commercially available was the Baird Televisor by the Baird Television Company, set up by the inventor of television, John Logie Baird. The company began selling televisions in 1929 when the BBC began broadcasting television signals.
The very first television was made by John Logie Baird in 1925 and was called a "Televisor" It was a demonstration model but in 1929, the Televisor was adopted as the television system for the BBC's broadcasts.
In England it was Baird, set up by the inventor of TV John Logie Baird- their first model was the 'Phonodisc' introduced in 1928, with a 4-inch circular screen. I'm not sure which was the first American company, though I DO know that the first sets retailed for about $75.which company first made the tv in present
The Baird Televisor was the only model available. The complete set of receiver and display sold at £150. Today, that would approximate to around £8000 or $12000.
The BBC, Alexandra palace, on 30 September 1929. Transmitted test transmissions of Logie Baird's Televisor system. In the mid 1930s the BBC began transmitting Baird's and EMI's systems, alternately.
Quieres este televisor? or Quieres esta tele?
The world's first operational television system was developed by John Logie Baird and demonstrated in March 1925 in Selfridges, a department store in London. Baird's "Televisor" was an electro-mechanical system but was nonetheless a fully operational television. Baird is therefore the undisputed inventor of television. Farnsworth showed his electro-mechanical television to the public in 1927, two years after Baird. However, by 1929, he had made the first fully electronic television which had no moving parts. Both Baird and Farnsworth were great pioneers in the world of television and both have great achievements to their names.
UK TV began broadcasting in 1928 using Baird's electro-mechanical "televisor" system and was thus the first in the world. The service was suspended for the duration of the Second World War.
J.L. Baird invented the first fully operational television set.
La Televisión = Television signal, program, station. Sometimes TV set, but not correct usage. El Televisor = Television set. La tele - slang
The worlds first working television system made its public debut in Selfridges, a London department store in March of 1925. The "Televisor" was John Logie Baird's name for the television he demonstrated and it was the same system that went into public service in 1929 when the BBC adopted Baird's system for the worlds first scheduled broadcasts. Selfridges were keen to support new technologies and the Televisor was installed in the store as a showcase for the product but was not for sale in 1925. Selfridges is still trading in Oxford Street in London but the televisions is has in store now are most certainly for sale.
No. Television was invented in the mid 1920s with John Logie Baird's Televisor and launched as a public service by the BBC in 1929. However, its development was delayed by World War II and it was the mid 1940s before televisions became common in homes.