No, Robert. Wooden wedges between the coils and the steel magnetic core do not 
cause any losses. They are transparent to magnetism. Also, the motor will be 
more efficient if the coil is NOT moving or vibrating. Movement wastes 
mechanical energy.

When I worked in the industrial world, a transformer with a loud hum was almost 
always caused by the wooden wedges falling out. There are supposed to be wedges 
between the steel core and the windings in a transformer to prevent movement 
and hum.

Jim Nichol

> On Nov 20, 2018, at 1:15 AM, Robert Wright via Phono-L <phono-l@oldcrank.org> 
> wrote:
> 
> Thank you, Mike! Hahaha, my phone's speech-to-text function butchers what I 
> tell it so frequently that I read right through your 'mess' no problem. 😊
> 
> So if I stick popsicle sticks between the outer coil windings and the core, 
> will any voltage be lost/wasted from anything being aligned differently than 
> originally manufactured, or does that not make any real difference in this 
> situation? 
> 
> I did try the plug in both polarities -- no change in hum volume. It has 
> worked on plenty of 60s and 70s portable phonos I've had, though.
> 
> 
> Best,
> Robert
> 
> 
> From: Phono-L <phono-l-boun...@oldcrank.org 
> <mailto:phono-l-boun...@oldcrank.org>> on behalf of Mike Stitt via Phono-L 
> <phono-l@oldcrank.org <mailto:phono-l@oldcrank.org>>
> Sent: Monday, November 19, 2018 10:08 PM
> To: Antique Phonograph List
> Cc: Mike Stitt
> Subject: Re: [Phono-L] Victor VE8-12X tonearm mounting bracket
>  
> Man my last email was a mess.
> Popsicle sticks can be used as shims to "tighten" up the coils. They tend to 
> shrink.
> Glyptal is a red slushing type of paint that insulates and drys hard. 
> It is common for use in re-insulating coils. The spray type isn't nearly as 
> good as the brush on type.
> It shouldn't make a difference but you might try turning the plug around.
> If that should elimate the hum, test for voltage between the motor and a 
> known ground. Before polarized plugs touching say a radio chassis and a water 
> pipe would zap you, 115 volts. 
> Mike
> Damn tablets! πŸ˜…
> On Mon, Nov 19, 2018, 5:30 PM Mike Stitt <smst...@gmail.com 
> <mailto:smst...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Loose coils can cause a hum type of sound. More than likely the swab used was 
> glyptal. If the coila are lose use popcycle sticks.
> Mike 
> 
> On Mon, Nov 19, 2018, 5:21 PM Leroy Barco via Phono-L <phono-l@oldcrank.org 
> <mailto:phono-l@oldcrank.org> wrote:
> I once had an electric credenza with a bad hum in the motor. 
> I found a small motor guy who diagnosed that it had β€œdried out β€œ. 
> He had a solution he swabbed on several times that permeated the windings and 
> fixed the hum. 
> 
> I’m like Sgt. Schultz on the details. β€œI know nothing!”
> 
> LeRoy
> On Mon, Nov 19, 2018 at 12:25 PM Ron L'Herault via Phono-L 
> <phono-l@oldcrank.org <mailto:phono-l@oldcrank.org>> wrote:
> The Victor book gives some tips on reducing hum, such as checking the plate 
> tightness, and adding felt between cabinet and motorboard.  There are no 
> circuit components other than switches.    Have you checked with George 
> Vollema for the tone arm bracket?  I understand that Wyatt Marcus is doing 
> really good Orth reproducer rebuilds.
>  
> Ron L
>  
> From: Phono-L [mailto:phono-l-boun...@oldcrank.org 
> <mailto:phono-l-boun...@oldcrank.org>] On Behalf Of Robert Wright via Phono-L
> Sent: Sunday, November 18, 2018 9:03 PM
> To: Phono L
> Cc: Robert Wright
> Subject: [Phono-L] Victor VE8-12X tonearm mounting bracket
>  
> Hey everyone, hope all is well with you folks! I need a whole new tonearm 
> mounting bracket assembly for a Victor VE8-12X that I just got. This one is 
> totally and utterly wrecked. Anyone know who's selling repros? Ron Sitko? 
> JAS? Anyone have current contact info for a dealer who would have some?
>  
> Also, has anyone rebuilt one of these electric platter motors? This one works 
> great, but it has a really loud mechanical 60Hz hum. I want to replace any 
> components in the circuit that I can, and also do a full cleaning and lube 
> job, but I would really like to know what I'm getting into first.
>  
> And lastly, anyone have Walt's current info in case I want to have him 
> rebuild this reproducer?
>  
> Thanks a million!
> Robert
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