In a message dated 9/3/2007 7:38:56 P.M. Mountain Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Why  would there be maroon paint under the elbow and
nowhere else?  What am  I missing?  Any suggestions
would be appreciated.  Thanks, Jerry  Blais



Hi Jerry,
 
Your comments made me look carefully at my Victor O.  I have a Victor  O with 
the original horn and it had no maroon accents about the horn (I  thought).  
Now when examining the very undersurface of the horn near where  it meets the 
elbow I can find traces of maroon!  And when removing the horn  from the 
elbow...voila! the horn is maroon!  Actually, when scratched (as  would be 
expected 
beneath the elbow) the maroon reveals the amber color  beneath.  So I must 
conclude that the maroon accents have indeed faded away  with time, UV, or 
whatever, with maroon remaining only in the protected area  underneath the 
elbow.
Fascinating!  Thanks.
----Art Heller



************************************** Get a sneak peek of the all-new AOL at 
http://discover.aol.com/memed/aolcom30tour
From [email protected]  Tue Sep  4 18:06:48 2007
From: [email protected] (Rich)
Date: Tue Sep  4 18:11:26 2007
Subject: [Phono-L] Mystery
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>

The red underneath the elbo is not exposed to ultraviolet.  No UV no fade.  
Very few pigments in use 
in the early 1900s were color fast.  Almost all of them fade and the color that 
they fade to, in most 
cases, is not what you would expect.


On Tue, 4 Sep 2007 19:55:50 EDT, [email protected] wrote:

> 
>In a message dated 9/3/2007 7:38:56 P.M. Mountain Daylight Time,  
>[email protected] writes:

>Why  would there be maroon paint under the elbow and
>nowhere else?  What am  I missing?  Any suggestions
>would be appreciated.  Thanks, Jerry  Blais



>Hi Jerry,
> 
>Your comments made me look carefully at my Victor O.  I have a Victor  O with 
>the original horn and it had no maroon accents about the horn (I  thought).  
>Now when examining the very undersurface of the horn near where  it meets the 
>elbow I can find traces of maroon!  And when removing the horn  from the 
>elbow...voila! the horn is maroon!  Actually, when scratched (as  would be 
>expected 
>beneath the elbow) the maroon reveals the amber color  beneath.  So I must 
>conclude that the maroon accents have indeed faded away  with time, UV, or 
>whatever, with maroon remaining only in the protected area  underneath the 
>elbow.
>Fascinating!  Thanks.
>----Art Heller



>************************************** Get a sneak peek of the all-new AOL at 
>http://discover.aol.com/memed/aolcom30tour
>_______________________________________________
>Phono-L mailing list
>http://phono-l.oldcrank.org



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