Mine too.  John M  
  
----- Original Message -----
From: Ron L'Herault
Sent: Friday, February 20, 2004 12:22 PM
To: Antique Phonograph List
Subject: RE: [Phono-L] favorite finds
  
You have my permission.

Ron L'Herault

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]]on Behalf Of john robles
Sent: Friday, February 20, 2004 12:02 PM
To: Antique Phonograph List
Subject: Re: [Phono-L] favorite finds


Gosh, all these stories are so great and inspirational! I had privately
requested permission to publish a couple of them in the GSPS Record, the
newsletter of the Golden State Phonograph Society, the California Chapter of
MAPS. Now I would like to ask permission of all the authors here if they
would mind if I printed their stories over the coming months. I will send a
free issue to whoever has their story included. I have already deleted
stories from two days ago and before, I am sorry to say. Anyway, may I have
your permission, authors??
THanks
John Robles

John Maeder <[email protected]> wrote:
A friend of mine still lives in the house he grew up in located in an old
neighborhood in Bristol, Virginia. He inherited it from his parents, who in
turn, inherited it from his father's parents. A few years ago, after he
realized my interest in old phonographs he told me that there was a machine
in the shed out back of house that had been there as long as he could
remember. I played the usual 20 Questions with him to try to get some idea
what it might be, but his answers were rather contradictory the machine
seemed to both have a horn and not have a horn -- be a cabinet model, but
maybe not. Two summers ago, my son was cutting this friend's lawn for him
and one day I had to go pick him up from there. In the back yard was an old
Model T shed that was now used for the lawn mower and paint storage, etc. I
looked inside and much to my surprise, there was a lyre front Amberola IA!
Sitting on top, was an earlier brass bell horn for a cylinder machine --
probably the one the Amber!
ola
replaced and the reason for my friend's confusion over whether it had a
horn or not. While my son finished the lawn, I looked the machine over as
best I could as it was half buried in a corner of the dim shed. It was
pretty rough. The finish had completely crystallized from heat/cold exposure
and gasoline fumes. When my friend came home, he offered to give me the
machine for free. I explained it was a scarce model and made him a fair
offer that he eventually accepted, but only at my continued insistence. We
dug the machine out and carried it into the light. Of course, the first
thing I wanted to do was examine the serial number so I opened the lid, but
there was no ID plate. Drats! I knew where the machine was counter-stamped,
so I scratched away the surface rust on the front mandrel carriage rail and
exposed the number '2' !!!! I checked the cabinet cross member -- '2' again!
I went back and looked where the ID plate would have been affixed and
realized that there were no !
brad
holes. This machine never had a plate! Stamped into the cabinet where the
plate would have been was again '2'. It is very prototypical in many ways --
has a Triumph motor for example. It came with a Diamond A (an upgrade), but
I am seeking the correct reproducer for it that would have a flattened,
nickel-plated fishtail weight and an 'H'-type sapphire stylus, and no model
designation on the weight. Anyway, I have always encouraged novice
collectors by telling them that 'Gold is where you find it' and this story
certainly proves it. I have left a part of this story out. On my way to pick
my son up that day, I was down in Tennessee and passed an antique store I
hadn't visited in a while. I was behind schedule and in a hurry, but
'something' made me pull in. I ran through the place quickly -- pretty much
the same stuff that had always been there. I walked in the back room and
there sat a nice Amberola III, complete except for the auto stop adjustment
bar. The price was right a!
nd I
bought it. I was feeling pretty good when I arrived at my friend's to pick
up my son . . . In 36 years of collecting, I have never found two moving
mandrel machines in one day in the wild. My wife told me that for days
afterwards I acted like I'd been struck by lightning! I guess I had and
twice in the same place! John M

----- Original Message -----
From: Ron L'Herault
Sent: Friday, February 20, 2004 9:04 AM
To: Antique Phonograph List
Subject: [Phono-L] favorite finds

OK, Here is my favorite find. Keep in mind that I started as a 13 yr. old
in 1961. When I was in college, a fellow Historical Society member who was
also a feature writer for a local paper did a story on my hobby. Soon
thereafter, I got a call from a fellow who had a phonograph for sale. I
went to look and it was a small, outside horn Victor. At the time, I only
had inside horn machines and a Suitcase Home. He had "cleaned" the horn
and managed to ruin the paint on it. It didn't run right. He asked me if I
wanted it and I said yes. He asked what it was worth and I truthfully
answered that I didn't know. "How a bout $10-I have to settle an estate",
he said. I agreed and my Victor P1 with the original box for its long
throat Exhibition sound box were on their way home with me. I couple years
previous to this I had rescued the mechanicals to an early Victrola and the
governor springs in it fit the P1 so I was able to get it playing smoothly
again. Black Spray paint and Brasso restored the horn. It is still one of
my favorites.

Ron L



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From john9ten  Fri Feb 20 11:59:09 2004
From: john9ten (john robles)
Date: Sun Dec 24 13:10:32 2006
Subject: [Phono-L] favorite finds
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>

Cool!

"Loran T. Hughes" <[email protected]> wrote:The 'Favorite Finds' series is 
archived for all eternity (or until the
next server crash) in the online Phono-L archives at
http://t2.cwihosting.com/pipermail/phono-l_oldcrank.com/ .

So if you missed some, you can go back and read!

Regards,
Loran

On Fri, 2004-02-20 at 09:01, john robles wrote:
> Gosh, all these stories are so great and inspirational! I had privately 
> requested permission to publish a couple of them in the GSPS Record, the 
> newsletter of the Golden State Phonograph Society, the California Chapter of 
> MAPS. Now I would like to ask permission of all the authors here if they 
> would mind if I printed their stories over the coming months. I will send a 
> free issue to whoever has their story included. I have already deleted 
> stories from two days ago and before, I am sorry to say. Anyway, may I have 
> your permission, authors??
> THanks
> John Robles
> 



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Phono-l mailing list
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From john9ten  Fri Feb 20 12:01:43 2004
From: john9ten (john robles)
Date: Sun Dec 24 13:10:32 2006
Subject: [Phono-L] favorite finds
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>

Thank you to those giving and continuing to give permission. Our readers will 
enjoy them and you can privately email me your mailing addresses if you would 
like to receive a copy when yours is printed. It iwll also give you a taste of 
our monthly newsletter. Membership in GSPS is $10 per year and contingent upon 
your being a member of MAPS (it is in their by-laws). We have a newsletter 
containing 2 or three good articles, a comic panel, schedule of meetings and 
the President's monthly message.
John Robles
John Robles

Ron L'Herault <[email protected]> wrote:
You have my permission.

Ron L'Herault

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]]on Behalf Of john robles
Sent: Friday, February 20, 2004 12:02 PM
To: Antique Phonograph List
Subject: Re: [Phono-L] favorite finds


Gosh, all these stories are so great and inspirational! I had privately
requested permission to publish a couple of them in the GSPS Record, the
newsletter of the Golden State Phonograph Society, the California Chapter of
MAPS. Now I would like to ask permission of all the authors here if they
would mind if I printed their stories over the coming months. I will send a
free issue to whoever has their story included. I have already deleted
stories from two days ago and before, I am sorry to say. Anyway, may I have
your permission, authors??
THanks
John Robles

John Maeder wrote:
A friend of mine still lives in the house he grew up in located in an old
neighborhood in Bristol, Virginia. He inherited it from his parents, who in
turn, inherited it from his father's parents. A few years ago, after he
realized my interest in old phonographs he told me that there was a machine
in the shed out back of house that had been there as long as he could
remember. I played the usual 20 Questions with him to try to get some idea
what it might be, but his answers were rather contradictory the machine
seemed to both have a horn and not have a horn -- be a cabinet model, but
maybe not. Two summers ago, my son was cutting this friend's lawn for him
and one day I had to go pick him up from there. In the back yard was an old
Model T shed that was now used for the lawn mower and paint storage, etc. I
looked inside and much to my surprise, there was a lyre front Amberola IA!
Sitting on top, was an earlier brass bell horn for a cylinder machine --
probably the one the Amber!
ola
replaced and the reason for my friend's confusion over whether it had a
horn or not. While my son finished the lawn, I looked the machine over as
best I could as it was half buried in a corner of the dim shed. It was
pretty rough. The finish had completely crystallized from heat/cold exposure
and gasoline fumes. When my friend came home, he offered to give me the
machine for free. I explained it was a scarce model and made him a fair
offer that he eventually accepted, but only at my continued insistence. We
dug the machine out and carried it into the light. Of course, the first
thing I wanted to do was examine the serial number so I opened the lid, but
there was no ID plate. Drats! I knew where the machine was counter-stamped,
so I scratched away the surface rust on the front mandrel carriage rail and
exposed the number '2' !!!! I checked the cabinet cross member -- '2' again!
I went back and looked where the ID plate would have been affixed and
realized that there were no !
brad
holes. This machine never had a plate! Stamped into the cabinet where the
plate would have been was again '2'. It is very prototypical in many ways --
has a Triumph motor for example. It came with a Diamond A (an upgrade), but
I am seeking the correct reproducer for it that would have a flattened,
nickel-plated fishtail weight and an 'H'-type sapphire stylus, and no model
designation on the weight. Anyway, I have always encouraged novice
collectors by telling them that 'Gold is where you find it' and this story
certainly proves it. I have left a part of this story out. On my way to pick
my son up that day, I was down in Tennessee and passed an antique store I
hadn't visited in a while. I was behind schedule and in a hurry, but
'something' made me pull in. I ran through the place quickly -- pretty much
the same stuff that had always been there. I walked in the back room and
there sat a nice Amberola III, complete except for the auto stop adjustment
bar. The price was right a!
nd I
bought it. I was feeling pretty good when I arrived at my friend's to pick
up my son . . . In 36 years of collecting, I have never found two moving
mandrel machines in one day in the wild. My wife told me that for days
afterwards I acted like I'd been struck by lightning! I guess I had and
twice in the same place! John M

----- Original Message -----
From: Ron L'Herault
Sent: Friday, February 20, 2004 9:04 AM
To: Antique Phonograph List
Subject: [Phono-L] favorite finds

OK, Here is my favorite find. Keep in mind that I started as a 13 yr. old
in 1961. When I was in college, a fellow Historical Society member who was
also a feature writer for a local paper did a story on my hobby. Soon
thereafter, I got a call from a fellow who had a phonograph for sale. I
went to look and it was a small, outside horn Victor. At the time, I only
had inside horn machines and a Suitcase Home. He had "cleaned" the horn
and managed to ruin the paint on it. It didn't run right. He asked me if I
wanted it and I said yes. He asked what it was worth and I truthfully
answered that I didn't know. "How a bout $10-I have to settle an estate",
he said. I agreed and my Victor P1 with the original box for its long
throat Exhibition sound box were on their way home with me. I couple years
previous to this I had rescued the mechanicals to an early Victrola and the
governor springs in it fit the P1 so I was able to get it playing smoothly
again. Black Spray paint and Brasso restored the horn. It is still one of
my favorites.

Ron L



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From gwphonos  Fri Feb 20 13:10:42 2004
From: gwphonos (Gregory Cline)
Date: Sun Dec 24 13:10:32 2006
Subject: [Phono-L] Favorite Story
References: <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>

One of my best finds..... A few years ago I was at work an received a 
telephone call from an older woman who said she was told that I 
collected old "victrolas".  I told her she was correct and she proceed 
to tell me that she had an "old Victrola that was her husbands, she 
wanted to sell it and was I interested."  I asked her some details and 
she was not sure what what I was asking in many cases.  She confirmed it 
was oak and that it played 78's.  She wasn't sure what I meant by a 
horn.  I asked her if it had any name on it like Victor? After a few 
minutes of discussion she said...."There is a decal on it that says 
Universal Talking Machine, Zonophone on it.  Is that something?"  I said 
where do you live, and when can I stop by?  It turns out she lives only 
3 blocks from my house.  I stopped by that evening and was delighted to 
find an  Excellent, complete, all original,  Zon-o-phone Concert Grand 
front mount machine.  Great decals, nickel, finish etc...I offered her a 
fair price and she was so happy with my offer, much more than she had 
expected.  This was my first Zonophone and I was thrilled!  This machine 
is still in my collection.
Gregg Cline



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