I've had one of these sets for quite a few years, and I know a bit about it.

Questions:

(1) I've altready said that i have one. It's a fairly uncommon set, many 
having been gutted, or if not, having the legs cut off. Mine is one of the 
early ones with the magnetic speaker; the RCA Loudspeaker 100. Later 
versions of the Hyperion had the RCA dynamic speaker, as the Loudspeaker 
104. I imagine that later models carried the 15-1 on the name plate.

(2) The line cord had been supplied with the set, and since it was so easily 
removed, it was removed by some creature in the past. If you really have to 
have the cloth covered original line cord stuff, it can be gotten, but I 
can't put my finger on just where just now. As far as the terminations, 
there are bakelite female plugs to be found that do the job, and a bakelite 
line plug that will look original. I'm one of the few people who know what 
the Victor sets used, but if you were going for a $10,000 prize in a judging 
contest, I'd never rat on you. The set will never know or care how the AC 
gets into it, anyway. By the way, I'd recommend getting a fused plug 
(Horrors!, it wouldn't be original!) for the line plug. It's good insurance 
for the old Victor and Brunswick phono combinations. If anything shorts past 
the plug, the fuse goes. Those plugs are sold in farm supply stores as fence 
controller plugs. I never had the original cord for mine either, and I've 
never been castigated for using an extension cord.

(3) Those little pieces have a nasty habit of disappearing. I'd recommend 
gluing back those you have, and putting a short wood screw in the flats of 
the other feet, and building them up with plastic wood, and sanding/filing 
them to shape and finishing with toned lacquer.

(4) Sounds like you have the albums that are a glossy brown with the HMV 
logo pressed in them. Those are the regular Orthophonic style that Victor 
used with sets like yours. I never had the ones from mine. They do pop up 
occasionally in flea markets and, of course, good ole eBay.

Are you certain thet the 10 tube is bad? If you have no luck finding one 
easily, the military type VT-25 is a later version of the 10. It may also be 
called a 10Y. There is a ceramic based 10, known as a 210T. If you don't 
have to absolutely have the original daylight bright balloon bulb 10, you 
can substitute a 10Y, and it'll work perfectly. I have one in my Brunswick 
P-11, which has a similar amplifier. By the way, RCA called the black 
amplifiers as you have in the Hyperion: "Tomcat". Don't ask me why; I don't 
know. It's in their service data.

The Hyperion has no provisions for external antenna, and doesn't do too bad 
on local and distant stations, but somewhere, Victor recommended a 6 inch 
diameter coil of wire, hanging from the rear of the cabinet behind the 
antenna side, probably about 20 turns, with one end to an antenna and the 
other to a ground (water pipe, etc.). It'll pick up like a screamin' demon.

Doug. Houston                           Ortonville, Michigan

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Richard Rubin" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2006 8:47 PM
Subject: [Phono-L] Victrola VE 15-1: Electrola Hyperion


> Hi, everybody.  Yesterday I picked up (literally, though I needed some 
> help,
> since it weighs about 300 lbs.) a very unusual machine:  A Victrola (or
> Electrola) model VE 15-1, also known as the "Hyperion."  (The latter is, 
> in
> fact, what appears on the ID tag.)  It's in really nice shape except for 
> two
> of the six feet, which have lost some (or in one case, all) of the wooden
> pieces that make them round instead of square.  Fortunately, they're in 
> the
> back.  The piece itself is a Victor electric phonograph coupled with an 
> RCA
> radio (a Radiola 28, their top-of-the-line in 1926) and an RCA electric
> speaker, built-in antenna, gold-plated hardware, Victor electric pickup,
> etc.  The cabinet itself is almost five feet tall and just about four feet
> wide, walnut veneer with maple inlay, decent shape.  Everything is there
> (including 8 of the 10 record albums) except for the needle cup and the 
> line
> cord, which plugs in to a regular two-pronged AC plug in the botton of the
> cabinet.  It seems to work, too, though one of the tubes -- a UX-210 -- 
> needs to be replaced, I believe.
>
> Questions:
>
> 1.  Does anyone know anything about this unit other than what's in the
> Baumbach books?  Anyone out there actually have one?  Anywhere I might 
> find
> more information?  I'd never even heard of the Hyperion until I found this
> one.
>
> 2.  Does anyone know where I can get a nice repro cloth-covered line cord
> with a female two-prong adapter at one end (presumably bakelite) and a 
> male
> plug at the other?  Does Antique Electronic Supply sell these?  If not, 
> does
> anyone else?  Did it even come with a line cord, or did folks just use
> extension cords (as did the people from whom I bought it)?
>
> 3.  Can anyone recommend a good carpenter who could recreate the wood 
> pieces
> that could round out the feet?  I have a couple to work from.
>
> 4.  The Victor albums that came with this piece are of a kind I've never
> seen before -- they are made of a a brown leatherette-type material, and
> letters.  Can anyone tell me anything about these?  Do they have a name or
> type number?  Do they ever come up on Ebay?
>
> As I said, I know very little about this machine other than what I've read
> in the Baumbach books, so I would appreciate any information anyone can
> share, no matter how small or seemingly irrelevant.
>
> Thanks!
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Phono-L mailing list
> [email protected]
>
> Phono-L Archive
> http://www.oldcrank.org/pipermail/phono-l/
> 

Reply via email to