Coin Slot Graphophone for auction in UK.
Posted: Fri Jun 14, 2019 8:43 am
https://forum.talkingmachine.info/
https://forum.talkingmachine.info/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=40864
From the single image provided, this BS appears to be complete. The braided connection from trunnion to horn is disconnected, but it seems to all be there. The coins are inserted from the top - - just above the coin chute. Here's a photo that shows it better:poodling around wrote:Most interesting.
I wonder:
Is it complete ? Where are the coins inserted ? Why does it have two horns ? Where would it have been displayed for use ?
(My ignorance knows no bounds)
phonogfp wrote:From the single image provided, this BS appears to be complete. The braided connection from trunnion to horn is disconnected, but it seems to all be there. The coins are inserted from the top - - just above the coin chute. Here's a photo that shows it better:poodling around wrote:Most interesting.
I wonder:
Is it complete ? Where are the coins inserted ? Why does it have two horns ? Where would it have been displayed for use ?
(My ignorance knows no bounds)
This rear view with the top removed shows virtually everything:
Neither horn in the auction is original to the machine. At the time the BS was sold, the customer had a choice of a horn or ear tubes. The glass ear pieces included in the auction may be original, but the red tubing is not.
It's surprising that the auctioneer (who clearly knows little about antique phonographs) should call this an "Edwardian" machine. In the U.S., sellers call a surprising amount of stuff "Victorian," whether it was made before 1901 or not. In this case, the auctioneer's refreshing change of pace may actually be a bit too late, as the BS appeared in mid-1898. They were, however, offered beyond 1901, so it's possibly Edwardian, but without the serial number it's impossible to tell.
Here's the earliest known advertisement for a BS, as it appeared inn the August 1989 issue of The Phonoscope:
As for where a BS would have been used, the ad above offers advice. Basically anywhere people might be congregated would work: train stations, ferry terminals, hotels, stores, etc. The BS was popular in that no electricity was needed, and it cost only $20.00. For these reasons, the BS is today the least difficult coin-operated cylinder phonograph to locate and afford.
You can access The Phonoscope online, and it's a rich source of information:
https://archive.org/details/phonoscope13hunt/page/n5
George P.