I was going to sell this Victrola No. 4 I had rebuilt today, but I decided to keep it after all. Has anyone ever run across a No. 4 such as this? When I took it apart, the gaskets were original and it had clearly never been apart before, and everything fits together perfectly as well.
Unusual Victrola No. 4 Reproducer
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Re: FOR SALE: Rebuilt All Brass Victrola No. 4 Reproducer -
Either that reproducer is really early, a prototype, or some oddball variant unless someone made their own inner decal. In all the years I have sought these brass Victor and HMV 4 reproducers out to upgrade machines or go on 1-70 project machines, I've never seen one that had that logo layout under the mica. Every Victor I have ever had or seen looked like this:
Any idea what's going on there?
Any idea what's going on there?
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Re: FOR SALE: Rebuilt All Brass Victrola No. 4 Reproducer -
Wait a sec... it's a re-branded HMV #4. Look at the front nickle part... no grooves.
Now I am really intrigued.
The back of it gives it away, too. A Victrola No. 4 isn't smooth. It looks like this:
Yes, most HMV #4s you'll find have an engraved back, but the earlies had the engraving under the mica and a smooth back.
I wonder... was there a shortage of Vic 4 repros and did a dealer import some HMVs? This might actually be a cool find.
Now I am really intrigued.
The back of it gives it away, too. A Victrola No. 4 isn't smooth. It looks like this:
Yes, most HMV #4s you'll find have an engraved back, but the earlies had the engraving under the mica and a smooth back.
I wonder... was there a shortage of Vic 4 repros and did a dealer import some HMVs? This might actually be a cool find.
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Re: FOR SALE: Rebuilt All Brass Victrola No. 4 Reproducer -
I wish I could answer your questions, but I do not have the answers! I can tell you for sure that the gaskets etc were original and I can tell it had never been taken apart. It does look more like an HMV, but the Victor decal is certainly original.
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Re: FOR SALE: Rebuilt All Brass Victrola No. 4 Reproducer -
I took a break from work here to pull out all my HMV #4s, including a couple earlies with the smooth back. ALL of them have backs that are notched out at the needle bar... but no Victors do- they are round.HisMastersVoice wrote:I wish I could answer your questions, but I do not have the answers! I can tell you for sure that the gaskets etc were original and I can tell it had never been taken apart. It does look more like an HMV, but the Victor decal is certainly original.
Here's an early smooth backed HMV #4:
http://www.graham-ophones.co.uk/communi ... 720335.jpg
(Sorry, it's too wide to use the IMG function)
See the flat spot/ notch at the bottom? I've never seen an HMV without it, only Victors.
At first I was leaning towards a home- made under- the- mica decal. But there's just too much about this that doesn't add up... in fact, enough that doesn't add up that it can't possibly be homemade or really a hybrid, either.
Here's the other interesting thing... it's impossible to swap a Victrola 4 back onto an HMV 4 front... at least in my experience. The raised area on the Victrola back is too big to fit the HMV front. The HMV back will fit the Victrola front, but it's a very sloppy fit- it basically swims around- and the screw hole pattern is close enough that you can get the screws in, but the last one will not sink down into the bevel.
I know I'm geeking out over little details here but this is just fascinating as all hell to me because it's exciting to see something I've never seen before on a common part of the type I've been upgrading all my machines with for at least the last 45 years, LOL.
I'm in the middle of a huge project right now & will have a great payday at the end... but I just can't do this ATM or I would be all over it.
This is just cool.
Where did you get this thing?
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Re: FOR SALE: Rebuilt All Brass Victrola No. 4 Reproducer -
I've decided to keep it for now, this is all very interesting! I can't remember exactly where I got it, it must have been a Stanton auction in the last few years but I don't recall for sure. It's been sitting in a box since I got it and finally decided to rebuild it today. Now that I know it's not just a run of the mill No. 4, it's a bit more interesting to me. Since all of my machines use exhibitions of some sort, I never really put much thought into it, but now that you pointed it out, I've not seen a No. 4 without the grooves on the front before. I'll move this to machines for further discussion.
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Re: Unusual Victrola No. 4 Reproducer
This might be a long shot, but could this possibly be an export model No. 4? I know most of the Japanese and the Canadian Victor things were marked to designate the export country, but this might pre-date the markings?
I've seen the JVC Orthophonic reproducers, which were actual Victor/JVC products (not knock-offs), and they are ever so slightly different from the American reproducers. For the JVC Orthophonic, the isolator opening/tonearm opening are significantly smaller. The whole reproducers also look a little rounder and stouter.
I'm still looking for a JVC Orthophonic with the smaller isolator opening if anyone has one!
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I've seen the JVC Orthophonic reproducers, which were actual Victor/JVC products (not knock-offs), and they are ever so slightly different from the American reproducers. For the JVC Orthophonic, the isolator opening/tonearm opening are significantly smaller. The whole reproducers also look a little rounder and stouter.
I'm still looking for a JVC Orthophonic with the smaller isolator opening if anyone has one!
-Connor
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Re: Unusual Victrola No. 4 Reproducer
I have a Victrola No.4 reproducer just like this. Yes, the markings are correct. Especially since it was never apart until you rebuilt it. I use this on my outside horn Victors to play electrically cut records. Properly rebuilt and tuned, they sound as good as an Orthophonic, to me.
Harvey Kravitz
Harvey Kravitz
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Re: Unusual Victrola No. 4 Reproducer
Interesting... another one. Wonder what the story is on this?Phonofreak wrote:I have a Victrola No.4 reproducer just like this. Yes, the markings are correct. Especially since it was never apart until you rebuilt it. I use this on my outside horn Victors to play electrically cut records. Properly rebuilt and tuned, they sound as good as an Orthophonic, to me.
Harvey Kravitz
I'm not aware of any other machines that used the Vic 4 other than the 1-70 and a couple of the portables as OEM. Could this variant have been a dealer upgrade for early Orthophonic records like the Improved Concert was an upgrade for the Exhibition?
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Re: Unusual Victrola No. 4 Reproducer
I also have a few of the HMV no. 4s that I use on my Victor V, III, Edison A-250 with lateral attachment and elsewhere. They certainly sound good.Phonofreak wrote:I have a Victrola No.4 reproducer just like this. Yes, the markings are correct. Especially since it was never apart until you rebuilt it. I use this on my outside horn Victors to play electrically cut records. Properly rebuilt and tuned, they sound as good as an Orthophonic, to me.
Harvey Kravitz