Read the blurb here under Otto Heinemann. He owned the company. 

http://books.google.com/books?id=xV6tghvO0oMC&pg=PA486&lpg=PA486&dq=General+Phonograph+Co.+Elyria,+Ohio&source=bl&ots=s8a-A1qjRT&sig=z4LpF6du4GfUmbA-Yz6HgIltAUw&hl=en&ei=hcHjSvCsEobk8Aa30JyIBw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CB8Q6AEwBw#v=onepage&q=General%20Phonograph%20Co.%20Elyria%2C%20Ohio&f=false
 

Bruce 
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Chris Kocsis" <[email protected]> 
To: "Antique Phonograph List" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Saturday, October 24, 2009 10:37:39 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [Phono-L] Questions about a General Phonograph Model E 

I got this cute little machine at an auction and have some basic 
questions I hope you can help me with. I've posted photos to 
Photobucket: http://s664.photobucket.com/albums/vv10/chrisk33/ 

1) Does this look like the original tone arm? 

2) How about the sound box -- see closeup -- It seems to say RCA and V 
in a deco style. Do those letters together mean that it was made no 
earlier than 1929 (the RCA and Victor merger)? Could it possibly be the 
one that was supplied on this machine? 

3) The sound box is not fastened to the tone arm very rigidly. There is 
a cylindrical red rubber seal (hard and cracking now, don't know if it 
was ever flexible) in between and the sound box can be twisted a little, 
both sideways (on the axis of the tonearm) and vertically, changing the 
angle that the needle makes with the line of the groove. Should the 
needle be slanted at all sideways with respect to the record surface, or 
would anything other than 90 degrees be tracking error? How about the 
rake of the needle longitudinally in the groove? All the phonographs 
I've seen with one-use needles seem to have the needle at an angle, such 
as 35 minutes past the hour if the sound box were a clock. What is this 
ideal angle? 

4) Lastly, much of the (nickel or chrome?) finish is corroded and pitted 
-- on the turntable edge, on/off switch, the needle cups -- can you 
recommend someone to restore these, or from your experience should I 
attempt to polish and plate them myself as suggested in "The Compleat 
Talking Machine"? 

Thank you! 

Chris 

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