I am not totally sure, but the Nipperhead.com website has a reproduction of the set-up manual for the Console among other phonographs; the illustration there of this part is the same as in the Froe book. I understand that the motors were pretty much the same after WWI--again, Froe is my authority. JS ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ron L'Herault" <[email protected]> Date: Fri, 8 Aug 2003 16:24:21 -0400 To: "'Antique phonograph discussion list for pre-1930 phonographs'" <Phono-l at oldcrank.com> Subject: RE: [Phono-L] Part for Diamond Disk phonograph
> Are the horn posts universal in this area? > > Ron L > > -----Original Message----- > From: Phono-l-bounces at oldcrank.com [mailto:Phono-l-bounces at oldcrank.com] > On Behalf Of John Sheets > Sent: Friday, August 08, 2003 1:35 PM > To: Phono-l at oldcrank.com > Subject: [Phono-L] Part for Diamond Disk phonograph > > Wonder if anybody can help with this? I am looking for a horn post > bracket for a 1926 Diamond Disk Chippendale Console that was in a flood. > This is the round spool-shaped piece that the horn post rests in-it > attaches to the cabinet base (this lost in the waves) If anybody has a > spare, I'd be grateful to hear about it--or a detailed illustration or > photograph I could take to a metal shop. There is an illustration of > this gizmo in the Froe book p. 36. > Thanks for any assistance-- > John Sheets (johnws at jps.net) > -- > ________________________________________________________________________ > ________ > Access your POP email anytime, anywhere with WebMail.com > (www.webmail.com), a product of Mail.com. > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Phono-l mailing list > Phono-l at oldcrank.com > http://oldcrank.com/mailman/listinfo/phono-l_oldcrank.com > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Phono-l mailing list > Phono-l at oldcrank.com > http://oldcrank.com/mailman/listinfo/phono-l_oldcrank.com -- ________________________________________________________________________________ Access your POP email anytime, anywhere with WebMail.com (www.webmail.com), a product of Mail.com.

