Disassembling a Diamond Disc Horn
- winsleydale
- Victor III
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Re: Disassembling a Diamond Disc Horn
I think I spy copper beneath the gold where it's worn through on my actual parts, as well, but this in turn raises the question of do I need to strip everything down to the base metal myself, or is that generally part of the process that a company will do before they plate it?
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- Valecnik
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Re: Disassembling a Diamond Disc Horn
Heck I would just clean the gold wash with ammonia and leave it as is. It will not be as bright as new but to me would look just fine.
- winsleydale
- Victor III
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Re: Disassembling a Diamond Disc Horn
A lot of it is actually gone, though.
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Edisone
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Re: Disassembling a Diamond Disc Horn
Why not just leave it alone? It looks fine to me.
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gramophone78
- Victor VI
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Re: Disassembling a Diamond Disc Horn
I was thinking the same. Also, gold plating is expensive (none of the parts are brass plated). Not sure this machine warrants this expenditure given the current condition of the plating....Edisone wrote:Why not just leave it alone? It looks fine to me.
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martinola
- Victor III
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Re: Disassembling a Diamond Disc Horn
Hi winsleydale.
Personally, I would try to do a cleanup/conservation as Valecnik suggested. You might be surprised how good it looks cleaned with ammonia and sealed with lacquer. I tried that with my VV-XVI about 8 years ago and will probably keep it that way. In considering re-doing the gold plating I would consider how much the machine is worth. I don't know what H-19s are going for, but I suspect the plating will double your expenses without doubling your machine's value. I had my Victor Credenza parts gold plated in 2003. At gold prices back then I spent about $380. I'm sure the costs will be higher today. I'm not saying "don't do it", but rather "try the cheapest option first and live with it awhile". In any case, good luck.
Regards,
Martin
Personally, I would try to do a cleanup/conservation as Valecnik suggested. You might be surprised how good it looks cleaned with ammonia and sealed with lacquer. I tried that with my VV-XVI about 8 years ago and will probably keep it that way. In considering re-doing the gold plating I would consider how much the machine is worth. I don't know what H-19s are going for, but I suspect the plating will double your expenses without doubling your machine's value. I had my Victor Credenza parts gold plated in 2003. At gold prices back then I spent about $380. I'm sure the costs will be higher today. I'm not saying "don't do it", but rather "try the cheapest option first and live with it awhile". In any case, good luck.
Regards,
Martin
- winsleydale
- Victor III
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Re: Disassembling a Diamond Disc Horn
I guess I should point out that the plating in question is not pictured. I am a thousand miles from my phonograph right now; I took a stock photo from Google to illustrate my point. My actual machine is not so nice as the picture.
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