Thanks for the additional information, Frank. If I hadn't automatically assumed that the plainness of Matt Brown's machine's cabinet indicated a later date, I would have noticed the doors. I have a first-year Favorite, with doors, and I'm aware of the problems the use of doors on the early cabinet models caused for
Columbia. Or rather, the problems
Victor caused
Columbia over the use of the doors. I still find it surprising that Victor was able to win that particular contest, doors being about as basic and natural implement as possible for the task of controlling sound. It's nearly as odd as if Victor had sued to prohibit the use of wheels on casters and won -- though I guess the lawsuit regarding the doors hinged (oops! NPI

) on the combination of doors with sound-control.
So it's interesting that, contrary to my assumption, the Nonpareil had ornamentation piled on (and how!) after its first iteration, and then lost at least some of that ornamentation over time. Huh. In any case, the one for sale in
Worcester almost
has to be an example of peak decoration for that particular model, I'd guess. Pretty fancy.
Though I'm pretty fond of my one
Columbia machine, based on Columbias I've seen, I think I'm squarely in the camp of those who feel that Victor machines are normally of higher quality. The too-frequent
Columbia pot-metal issues are seriously detrimental, in my opinion, and they seem to have started early while as far as I know Victor used little pot-metal for anything until the Orthophonic era -- with the famously sad result that so many Orthophonic reproducers, as well as their brackets, are degraded today. The frequent use of pot-metal by
Columbia is in itself enough to justify a little wariness on the part of a collector. Then too there are the amazing "disappearing"
Columbia governor weights, among other potential problems, and, as I understand it,
Columbia's tracking can be tough on records.
Victor also made a really clever design choice when they used their trademark curvilinear front (and sometimes back) posts, because those often simple curves, even on the cheaper Victors, break up the boxy look that so many phonographs of the period -- the lesser Columbias included -- tend to have. Even a VV-X benefits from those slight curves, while a
Columbia at the same price point (would that be the 100?) looks very plain by comparison. But a
Columbia like this particular version of the Nonpareil, with so much
serious ornamentation baked in, is a great-looking machine indeed. If it does in fact have all-brass components, I'd think it would be well worth putting some effort into. Wish I had the room for it!