Just picked this up from facebook marketplace for a pretty good price, the woman selling it said if she wasn't going to sell it she'd strip it and paint the cabinet , couldn't have that so I bought it.
it's a HMV 145 in pretty decent shape, just a pretty worn lid, with a HMV 5A soundbox, a spare unnamed soundbox and stack of records, nothing much worth shouting about in the records, a couple of rock and roll ones mostly very worn from never using fresh needles, but some not too bad, but i'm pretty happy with the machine, I think at some point someone converted it into something, judging by some cut outs inside and another hole in the right hand side, but it must have been converted back as everything on it now is original.
She named it after the man she bought it from who was the original owner, so meet Arthur...
(click on images for them to appear the right way around)
HMV 145 saved from the shabby chic movement
- kirtley2012
- Victor IV
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- Victor VI
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Re: HMV 145 saved from the shabby chic movement
Great save. Way to go. I guess it's now principle to buy machines to save them from shabby chic.
Harvey Kravitz
Harvey Kravitz
- epigramophone
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Re: HMV 145 saved from the shabby chic movement
Well done for saving this machine. In my view there is no such thing as shabby chic. It is not chic, just shabby.
An HMV145 was my everyday player for over 40 years, and punched well above it's size for sound quality. Having acquired larger and rarer machines I eventually sold it to a collector friend who lives about 400 yards from me, so I still regularly hear it.
The motor was fully rebuilt with new springs in 1987 by the late Philip Knighton (The Gramophone Man of Wellington, Somerset) and runs faultlessly. The No.5A soundbox has not been touched since my original purchase in 1965, and still sounds as good as any I have heard. If it ain't broke, don't fix it!
An HMV145 was my everyday player for over 40 years, and punched well above it's size for sound quality. Having acquired larger and rarer machines I eventually sold it to a collector friend who lives about 400 yards from me, so I still regularly hear it.
The motor was fully rebuilt with new springs in 1987 by the late Philip Knighton (The Gramophone Man of Wellington, Somerset) and runs faultlessly. The No.5A soundbox has not been touched since my original purchase in 1965, and still sounds as good as any I have heard. If it ain't broke, don't fix it!
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- Victor VI
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Re: HMV 145 saved from the shabby chic movement
Great machine and good save. Yes, stopping the scrap drive in the war on good taste is a beneficial thing. Probably this lady didn't know that wood can be refinished without a furniture-factory...always good giving them the benefit of the doubt.
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- Victor VI
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Re: HMV 145 saved from the shabby chic movement
kirtley2012 wrote:Just picked this up from facebook marketplace for a pretty good price, the woman selling it said if she wasn't going to sell it she'd strip it and paint the cabinet , couldn't have that so I bought it.
it's a HMV 145 in pretty decent shape, just a pretty worn lid, with a HMV 5A soundbox, a spare unnamed soundbox and stack of records, nothing much worth shouting about in the records, a couple of rock and roll ones mostly very worn from never using fresh needles, but some not too bad, but i'm pretty happy with the machine, I think at some point someone converted it into something, judging by some cut outs inside and another hole in the right hand side, but it must have been converted back as everything on it now is original.
She named it after the man she bought it from who was the original owner, so meet Arthur...
(click on images for them to appear the right way around)
I've got 8 machines for you to save when are you coming to buy them ?
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- Victor IV
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Re: HMV 145 saved from the shabby chic movement
Shabby chic-EEK!edisonplayer
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- Victor III
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Re: HMV 145 saved from the shabby chic movement
How about this rescue - this poor horn machine had been got at by the shabby-chic'ers and had been painted Pink and gold !! As if it hadn't suffered enough indignity, when it arrived it had also been smashed to bits in the post. The paint was so evil I had to have it chemically stripped back to the oak and then reassemble the poor thing. I am pleased with the result though !!
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- Victor IV
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Re: HMV 145 saved from the shabby chic movement
Pepto-Bismol pink! edisonplayer
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- Victor II
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Re: HMV 145 saved from the shabby chic movement
Great save. A nice model. I have one I bought from an antique store in D.C. The dealer's plaque says it came from C. Bruce Miller in Aberdeen Scotland. Now it resides with me in Chicago. I can not see but does yours have the automatic stop and start on it? That feature was new to me and it works great.