
Still, this was a dung cellar find, and it was a sad look really, a HMV 157 standing alone in this dung cellar. I still tool some pity on it, since I knew the landfill was close on the horizon for this machine. I at first wanted to try to restore it, but with doors that were bent because of long time dampness, and also missing veneer on both door, and veneers falling off on the rest of the machine, I understood this would be too difficult, at least for me to restore it.
Still, I had a solution. For a longer period I knew a gramophone enthusiast had been looking for a horn for his 157, somehow his machine had had its horn removed in the past, and the cabinet on that machine was good looking, only missing its horn. So well, the horn was salvaged from this dung cellar machine, and I helped the soon lucky owner of the horn missing 157 to get his machine up and running.
Another part of the story is that I had to carry the horn 10 floors up since the elevator was not working, and of course also forgot some wooden strips that is holding the cabinet in its position in my car, so I had to walk 20 floors up during the first few minutes of the visit, luckily my heart is still pretty strong, at least it seems so...
