I have become the guardian of what would seem to be a rare collection of '78s.  
If the information is acurate, these discs were part of a collection owned by a 
newspaper columnist in the mid-west, who reviewed these recordings as they were 
published.  The current owner of this collection also has the Victrola on which 
they were first heard.  Some are 12" discs, some are 7", many are single sided, 
which leads me to believe they may have been demos issued to review or 
broadcast before distribution.  Some of the patent dates are before the turn of 
the century.

I'm still in the initial documentation stage.  What little research I have done 
has stressed caution when attempting to actually play these recordings.  So, 
I'm refraining from allowing them near the turntable without some further 
advice.  I have learned that the 78 rpm speed is only the beginning.  The 
consumer phono I own, no doubt, is without  the specialized needle required to 
preserve the surface and dignity of these grand old performances.
In fact, some of the labels warn of damage if played more than once on a single 
needle.

Eventually, I'll want to rent, borrow or obtain a device deemed safe to 
transfer these recordings.  I live in the Portland, Oregon area (USA) if you 
have any suggestions.

Thank you

Steve
From [email protected]  Wed Sep 20 10:29:17 2006
From: [email protected] (Ron L'Herault)
Date: Sun Dec 24 13:11:54 2006
Subject: [Phono-L] A New Collector
In-Reply-To: 
<091920062208.15775.45106a43000a7d1400003d9f2200745672029a0d9...@comcast.net>
Message-ID: <001001c6dcda$4ce19030$21d42...@busdm801ron>

Good for you, Steve.

If your modern turntable has a flip over cartridge, the 78 stylus will play
these records without damaging them although they may not sound as good as
they could.  Sometimes you need a stylus that is 3 mil or larger.  I think
the flip overs are more like 2.7 mil.   Your Victrola can be used to play
them occasionally if the tone arm moves smoothly and you have had the
reproducer rebuilt. Mainly what is done is to replace the hardened gasket
material on either side of the mica diaphragm.   

You should use a fresh steel needle for each play and then discard it.  Use
the can with the hole in the lid.

Ron L

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Steve Atkins
Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 2006 6:08 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Phono-L] A New Collector

I have become the guardian of what would seem to be a rare collection of
'78s.  If the information is acurate, these discs were part of a collection
owned by a newspaper columnist in the mid-west, who reviewed these
recordings as they were published.  The current owner of this collection
also has the Victrola on which they were first heard.  Some are 12" discs,
some are 7", many are single sided, which leads me to believe they may have
been demos issued to review or broadcast before distribution.  Some of the
patent dates are before the turn of the century.

I'm still in the initial documentation stage.  What little research I have
done has stressed caution when attempting to actually play these recordings.
So, I'm refraining from allowing them near the turntable without some
further advice.  I have learned that the 78 rpm speed is only the beginning.
The consumer phono I own, no doubt, is without  the specialized needle
required to preserve the surface and dignity of these grand old
performances.
In fact, some of the labels warn of damage if played more than once on a
single needle.

Eventually, I'll want to rent, borrow or obtain a device deemed safe to
transfer these recordings.  I live in the Portland, Oregon area (USA) if you
have any suggestions.

Thank you

Steve
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