And, having just replaced two Edison springs, I can attest to how hard
it is to load those suckers into their cans.  Edison springs are quite a
bit beefier than Victor or Columbia springs.

Ron L

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Robert Wright
Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2006 2:38 PM
To: Antique Phonograph List
Subject: Re: [Phono-L] B250 Diamond Disc spring question

In addition to all the great advice on the DIY approach, let me give
another
hearty recommendation or our own Steven Medved.  He fixed exactly this
same
problem with my Amberola 30 and knows as much about barrel-spring
rebuilding
as anyone in Edison's shop would have 100 years ago.  (I don't mean to
volunteer you, Steve, but I'm just so thrilled with the fine work you
did
that I can't keep it to myself!)

Best,
Robert




> -----Original Message-----
Daniel Melvin
> Subject: [Phono-L] B250 Diamond Disc spring question
>
> Hi all,
>
> I'm not much of an expert on Diamond Disc machines, but I have a
beautiful
> B250 that stopped working. I had just played a record and went to play
a
> second and the spring would no longer wind. The crank just moves
loose. I
> did not hear the spring break, so I am thinking it may have come
> disconnected inside the spring barrell. Everything is so large and
I've
> never taken one apart before. Is this an easy thing to check? Is the
> mechinism in a B250 unique to that early machine or could it be
interchanged
> with another?
>
> Thanks for any advise you might have.
>
> Dan

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