I can see that my memory was quite faulty.  I had to go remove the arm on my
Grafonola to see what was going on.  The wire clip is part of the slot and
tab system.  I raised the arm 90 degrees and off it came.

Ron L

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of john robles
Sent: Sunday, February 25, 2007 12:17 PM
To: Antique Phonograph List
Subject: RE: [Phono-L] Columbia tonearm needed

Hi Walt
  Thanks for the great info! Actually, I think it was the interlocking
castings, because I got the remaining part of the tonearm out of the elbow
(see pics). I think a new elbow is required too because it looks like the
internal casting is damaged. The tonearm was broken off at the elbow, but
the part remaining inside did turn still.
  John

Walt <[email protected]> wrote:
  John,

Does the tone arm swivel freely (i.e. raise and lower) easily?

Assuming that it does move freely and you are POSITIVE that it is the type
with the wire retainer ring, first oil the joint as best you can. Let the
oil run into the joint for a few minutes. I have a jig for holding the base,
but you can wrap it with a thick towel or piece of thick rubber pad better
yet and then secure it in a vice with just enough tension to hold it in
place so it doesn't move. Don't over tighten the vice or you will crush the
pot metal. Once securely held, swing the tone arm out and tap it away form
the elbow (as to separate the parts) very gingerly with a small urethane or
wood hammer as close to the elbow as possible.

Every now and then I can simply oil them and they have enough play to wiggle
loose by hand simply pulling outwardly and rocking the parts very lightly as
you pull. But most of the time (like yesterday and last week) there isn't
enough play to easily separate them, so I use the technique described above.
If the elbow and tone arm are seized or exceedingly stubborn, be extremely
careful and use as much penetrating oil as you can. Tap very lightly and
take your time. I have never had one that could not be removed, but they do
sometimes take a while to get apart.

If you aren't sure if the parts have the inside retaining ring or the
interlocking castings, the same technique will work, but with the latter
configuration you want to make certain that you have the tone arm in the
"raised" position (which allows the molded tab on the arm to align with the
open slot on the elbow) should you need to tap it lightly. Otherwise, it
will look like most of the elbows you see on eBay .

Walt

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of john robles
Sent: Saturday, February 24, 2007 8:29 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Phono-L] Columbia tonearm needed

Hi All
I am in need of a grafonola tonearm as shown in the attached photo. Can
anyone help me with this? It is for a young lady who needs her Grafonola
fized. And if someone can tell me how to release the arm from the elbow I
would appreciate it..can;t seem to get it. I think it has a retainer ring,
but can't figure how to release it.
Thanks
John Robles

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