SOLD: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Buy, sell, or trade your phonograph-related items here [except music]
phonohound
Victor II
Posts: 478
Joined: Wed Mar 16, 2011 10:51 am

SOLD: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Post by phonohound »

For sale is a nice Columbia AT cylinder Graphophone 3rd style circa 1903. This phonograph is not perfect, but is a strong and loud player. You will also notice at the bottom-left f the bedplate there is a mounting to add a gem or Fireside type of crane. I have not seen this before on an AT. Very cool!

The wood cabinet has an excellent original finish with some spotting of the front decal. The rear decal is just about perfect.
The bedplate is near mint, original condition.
The stenciling is weak, but the enamel is nice.
The leather belt is original and in great shape.
The trunion sleeve collar is pot metal and in fine shape and glides across the feedscrew as it should.
The lift lever is tight and needs some force to lift the reproducer up amd down. The remedy is to file the lift lever slightly since it has expanded.
The phonograph includes the reproduction horn shown in the photos and the original slip off crank.

I have added many photos and a video so you can see and hear the machine play.

VIDEO: https://youtu.be/rG-yAucIM6c

Price is $500 + shipping. Free local pickup available in Wisconsin.

Thanks for looking
Attachments
20210922_154207.jpg
20210922_154152.jpg
20210922_154033.jpg
20210922_154020.jpg
20210922_153919.jpg
20210922_153825.jpg
20210922_153814.jpg
20210922_153807.jpg
20210922_153801.jpg
20210922_153752.jpg
20210922_153740.jpg
20210922_153729.jpg
20210922_153722.jpg
Last edited by phonohound on Fri Sep 24, 2021 8:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.

User avatar
Phono-Phan
Victor V
Posts: 2475
Joined: Fri Apr 06, 2012 9:38 pm
Location: Plover, WI

Re: FOR SALE: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Post by Phono-Phan »

WOW!!! That is very nice. I wouldn't be surprised it it sells fast.

User avatar
Lucius1958
Victor VI
Posts: 3935
Joined: Tue Dec 14, 2010 12:17 am
Location: Where there's "hamburger ALL OVER the highway"...

Re: FOR SALE: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Post by Lucius1958 »

Now, pardon me if I'm incorrect, but didn't the third style AT have the "high trunnion" carriage? This looks more like a first style carriage... :?:

Edit: on consulting Hazelcorn's book, he estimated production of the first style AT at about 70,000 units: that would seem to put the serial number of this machine within that range (in comparison, my AT from about 1899 is in the 214,xxx range). Could this be a first style machine that was upgraded into a third style case? :geek:

- Bill

User avatar
ChuckA
Victor III
Posts: 547
Joined: Thu Jan 15, 2009 6:32 pm
Personal Text: Learn from the mistakes of others - You can't live long enough to make them all yourself.
Location: South Eastern PA
Contact:

Re: FOR SALE: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Post by ChuckA »

I won't say never but I haven't seen the 3rd style cabinet with the early 45 degree carriage.
The carriage sleeve is the later pot metal style so it's doubtful someone just put a 1st style upper works on a 3rd style lower works.
It is possible just the early reproducer mount was attached to the sleeve if the pot metal high trunion broke.
Or Columbia just used whatever they had when this was built.

Here are my 3 AT's 1st, 2nd & 3rd Style
DSCN1259.jpg

Chuck

User avatar
dzavracky
Victor IV
Posts: 1556
Joined: Fri Oct 25, 2019 11:37 pm
Personal Text: college collector
Location: Knoxville Tennessee
Contact:

Re: FOR SALE: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Post by dzavracky »

I don’t mean to disrupt the thread… but Is that a diamond disc cabinet under the Graphophones?

David

User avatar
FellowCollector
Victor IV
Posts: 1938
Joined: Tue Jul 07, 2009 7:22 pm
Contact:

Re: FOR SALE: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Post by FellowCollector »

ChuckA wrote: Wed Sep 22, 2021 11:37 pm I won't say never but I haven't seen the 3rd style cabinet with the early 45 degree carriage.
The carriage sleeve is the later pot metal style so it's doubtful someone just put a 1st style upper works on a 3rd style lower works.
It is possible just the early reproducer mount was attached to the sleeve if the pot metal high trunion broke.
Or Columbia just used whatever they had when this was built.
Chuck,
If the bed plates are the same and the motors use the same crank hole position in the cabinet throughout all 3 versions of the Columbia AT is it not possible that someone simply removed the entire works from a 1st version AT and put it into a 3rd version cabinet here at some point? I believe that I have all 3 versions of the Columbia AT here as well but I can't recall if the motors used the same crank hole position in each cabinet and I'm too lazy to pull the works out of each to examine them. :lol:

Doug

User avatar
ChuckA
Victor III
Posts: 547
Joined: Thu Jan 15, 2009 6:32 pm
Personal Text: Learn from the mistakes of others - You can't live long enough to make them all yourself.
Location: South Eastern PA
Contact:

Re: FOR SALE: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Post by ChuckA »

Doug,

Yes they are the same, only visual difference except for the high trunnion, is the first style uses a brass sleeve the other 2 use the pot metal style.

David,

Yes it's a DD cabinet holds 160 records.


Chuck

ticticdok
Victor III
Posts: 542
Joined: Wed Jul 04, 2012 10:32 am

Re: FOR SALE: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Post by ticticdok »

PM Sent

phonohound
Victor II
Posts: 478
Joined: Wed Mar 16, 2011 10:51 am

Re: FOR SALE: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Post by phonohound »

Hi ticticdok. No pm has been received.

User avatar
Lucius1958
Victor VI
Posts: 3935
Joined: Tue Dec 14, 2010 12:17 am
Location: Where there's "hamburger ALL OVER the highway"...

Re: FOR SALE: COLUMBIA AT CYLINDER GRAPHOPHONE

Post by Lucius1958 »

ChuckA wrote: Thu Sep 23, 2021 5:58 pm Doug,

Yes they are the same, only visual difference except for the high trunnion, is the first style uses a brass sleeve the other 2 use the pot metal style.

David,

Yes it's a DD cabinet holds 160 records.


Chuck
Only the very earliest (1898) first style ATs used the brass sleeve; the sleeve on mine was definitely pot metal.

- Bill

Post Reply