Now THIS is what Bob's email should have said. I get this, and it is good 
advice without making me feel like a whipped puppy as his email did.

wilenzick at bellsouth.net wrote:  Bob's e-mail response may have been a bit 
crude, but his advice was right-on. Buying a Berliner for resale to earn money 
can be a big problem, unless you are very careful and experienced with them. 
These machines are generally purchased as interesting historical artifacts, 
rather than fine playing phonos. They are not rare, and usually sell in the 
range of 2-4K, sometimes more depending on originality, condition, country of 
origin, etc. Most have repro parts and therefore not desirable to many serious 
collectors. They usually sit on the shelf and look cute with a nipper looking 
into the horn. I doubt collectors play them very often as records are hard to 
fine, expensive, and usually quite worn. If you want to resell one, it would be 
best to get an original from a little old ladies attic :) As Bob said, it may 
be best to pass on this one unless it's is a very good deal. In that case, keep 
it on your shelf. Just my opinion.

Ray 
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