The Winston "Portable !"

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Gramtastic
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The Winston "Portable !"

Post by Gramtastic »

Anyone know more about this strange machine ? It is made of sheet steel and weighs in at an incredible 30lbs (over two stone). It is very sturdily made in a utilitarian way and seems almost (literally? ) bomb proof. It was made by Portogram Radio Electrical Industries of London SW16. I assumed it was made for the forces in the war but looking up the company on the net reveals they only formed in December'44 so it could only have been made for the last few months of the war.
Was it made as a contract for the armed forces to their spec. or could the public buy it as well ?
Could it have been produced post war to mark Churchill's contribution to victory and was meant for a Cold war bunker when all the power stations had been blown up ???
Another strange thing is that despite is robustness and 12 inch turntable is is fitted with a tiny Garrard 20 single spring motor which seems somewhat puny for a solid lump of machine like this.

Any info gratefully received !!
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poodling around
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Re: The Winston "Portable !"

Post by poodling around »

Gramtastic wrote:Anyone know more about this strange machine ? It is made of sheet steel and weighs in at an incredible 30lbs (over two stone). It is very sturdily made in a utilitarian way and seems almost (literally? ) bomb proof. It was made by Portogram Radio Electrical Industries of London SW16. I assumed it was made for the forces in the war but looking up the company on the net reveals they only formed in December'44 so it could only have been made for the last few months of the war.
Was it made as a contract for the armed forces to their spec. or could the public buy it as well ?
Could it have been produced post war to mark Churchill's contribution to victory and was meant for a Cold war bunker when all the power stations had been blown up ???
Another strange thing is that despite is robustness and 12 inch turntable is is fitted with a tiny Garrard 20 single spring motor which seems somewhat puny for a solid lump of machine like this.

Any info gratefully received !!
Sorry if this is irrelevant - but I found this link.

https://www.the-saleroom.com/en-gb/auct ... 7801204451

saying:

WWI Naval aluminium cased portable gramophone 'The Winston' also marked Manufacturers Portogram Radio Electrical Industries Ltd, London SW16 and this instrument is the property of the R N W A F Admiralty

It seems very similar but there is a different screw and the writing seems feinter - different tonearm 'fixer'.

It has documentation too and sold quite recently.
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Gramtastic
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Re: The Winston "Portable !"

Post by Gramtastic »

Thanks ! It's strange that those fleet orders to do with amenities are dated over a year before the company started.... Perhaps they commissioned Portogram to produce machines for them and it took them a year to register the company ??

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poodling around
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Re: The Winston "Portable !"

Post by poodling around »

Gramtastic wrote:Thanks ! It's strange that those fleet orders to do with amenities are dated over a year before the company started.... Perhaps they commissioned Portogram to produce machines for them and it took them a year to register the company ??

Yes, it is odd.

Also, I suppose they meant to say ww2 instead of ww1 ?

Very interesting 'all around'.

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poodling around
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Re: The Winston "Portable !"

Post by poodling around »

Gramtastic wrote:Thanks ! It's strange that those fleet orders to do with amenities are dated over a year before the company started.... Perhaps they commissioned Portogram to produce machines for them and it took them a year to register the company ??

Oh, in a previous thread epigramophone mentioned during 2013 that he has/had one of these gramophones - so you might consider DMing him to see if he has any further information.

Thread here:

http://forum.talkingmachine.info/viewto ... n&start=10

epigramophone
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Re: The Winston "Portable !"

Post by epigramophone »

My machine also has the "Property of R.N.W.A.F Admiralty" script.
The initials stand for "Royal Naval Welfare Amenities Fund" which suggests that the machine was intended for entertainment rather than official use.

The Winston was made in three colours for the three branches of H.M.Forces. Olive Green for the Army, Air Force Blue for the RAF and Battleship Grey for the Navy. I have seen all three, but the Navy version seems to be the most common.

The machines are basic in the extreme. As well as the puny Garrard No.20 motor already mentioned, there is no autobrake and no provision for needle storage.

soundgen
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Re: The Winston "Portable !"

Post by soundgen »

They were all made to shelter behind when attacked hence the very thick steel ! :lol:

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