Original North American cylinder?

Discussions on Records, Recording, & Artists
Post Reply
User avatar
edisonphonoworks
Victor IV
Posts: 1566
Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2009 10:50 am
Personal Text: A new blank with authentic formula and spiral core!
Contact:

Original North American cylinder?

Post by edisonphonoworks »

I recently won an original North American cylinder blank, and it has the proper rolled over edges around the channel. I know that it has a new recording on it. (It should arrive tomorrow.) What I found interesting is the fact it went for only $22.00???? Ok so the recording may be new, but a blank that is a minimum of 122 years old, has almost no value???


Which makes me understand why you all think us blank makers are crazy on our $35.00-$50.00 prices per blank. If a 122+ blank is worth only 25.00. If we were to be paid to make blanks near the value of our time they would be $160.00 each,If we were to value the time at $20.00 an hour, which I think is low for something that almost nobody wants or cares to do. Am I in business? Yes for lectures and demonstrations, and live recordings for artists. However where a person can order a cylinder and blank and purchase it, by sending a recording to me, or an order out of the blue No not in business for that.

User avatar
rgordon939
Victor V
Posts: 2655
Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2012 2:41 pm
Location: Linden, NJ 07036
Contact:

Re: Original North American cylinder?

Post by rgordon939 »

I was watching the listing also. I questioned if it was an authentic North American cylinder. I'll be interested in what you think about it after you receive it.

Rich Gordon

User avatar
edisonphonoworks
Victor IV
Posts: 1566
Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2009 10:50 am
Personal Text: A new blank with authentic formula and spiral core!
Contact:

Re: Original North American cylinder?

Post by edisonphonoworks »

The blanks is authentic, but the recording is not, don't know until it arrives.

Online
JerryVan
Victor Monarch Special
Posts: 6631
Joined: Mon Aug 24, 2009 3:08 pm
Location: Southeast MI

Re: Original North American cylinder?

Post by JerryVan »

Is a blank still a blank if it's been recorded on? I think that marred its value. Were it a blank blank, I think it would have done better better.

Also too, a blank North American cylinder is more of an artifact that really should be left as-is for its historic value. In that sense, it's of no value to anyone who wants to make a recording. So, aside from its great historic value, it's useless. On the other hand, your blanks serve a practical purpose to anyone who wishes to re-live the practice of making a home cylinder recording. They're also extremely unique given your dedicated research into the formulas & recipes needed to create blanks in a historically accurate manner. There is value in that as well! So, to compare the relative prices of each, is an apples-to-oranges affair. Honestly, they may look the same but are, in reality, two very different items.

User avatar
edisonphonoworks
Victor IV
Posts: 1566
Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2009 10:50 am
Personal Text: A new blank with authentic formula and spiral core!
Contact:

Re: Original North American cylinder?

Post by edisonphonoworks »

I agree no matter how bad the original recording on it was, Nobody should of shaved it!!!!!! I hope it will be here tomorrow. It has a value also as even though it is a blank, it is of a slightly different formula than later brown wax acetate of alumina was used for these early blanks, and required a longer cooking time to rid it of acetic acid. Those made after 1896 which use metallic aluminum sheet vary from white to dark brown. I also found that North American Edison blanks are similar to early Columbia blanks, in they have a single spiral although they are just a bit longer and thicker than early Columbia blanks and that is how you can tell them apart, also early Columbia (1896-1897) blanks tend to be lighter than the North Americans as they used a lower cooking process. In 1898 Columbia started to cook the wax to 475, and the late 1898-1901 brown wax Columbia records are the same size as the Edison blank, however the single spiral in them is wider than the double spiral of Edison blanks (I am currently trying to figure out when Edison switched from single spiral to double.

User avatar
edisonphonoworks
Victor IV
Posts: 1566
Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2009 10:50 am
Personal Text: A new blank with authentic formula and spiral core!
Contact:

Re: Original North American cylinder?

Post by edisonphonoworks »

It arrived, the home recording on it was rather good, it was three different recordings From the voice, it sounds like an rather educated bunch who has levity, and some astuteness, The Hildebrand family the first song is Rings on My fingers and Bells on my toes. I checked and this song was written in 1909, the next song is a quartet and is The Doughnut song which is an old camp song, about someone going into a doughnut shop and grabbing the doughnut out of the hot grease and handing the proprietor a 5 cent piece. how Old, I am not sure, so we know it was recorded after 1909, it is a pretty loud and clear recording for a home recording, there is no blast in it, so someone had known a little about recording technique, still a home recording but a very good one. The last recording I am not sure what it is. The blank is certainly original. It also authenticates the blank I have with the very crude channel, it is cut with some tool on the other, I though it fake, however the physical characteristics of these blanks match. Both waxes, in each blank, even though they came from different places, have the wax has the same smell. If you are not a cylinder maker you have no idea, what I am talking about, but brown wax cylinders, if they are not moldy (you can still smell some of the chemical makeup and both are from the same compound and factory. I have included some photos to further educate you about how to identify different blanks. If anyone has any corrections or anything to add I would greatly appreciate any constructive criticizem.
Attachments
National Phonograph Company brown wax blank circa 1900 note that it has double start spiral, the small end is different it drops of on more a slant than rounded over, when Edison adapted this change I am trying to figure out if anyone will cooperate and share if they know of Edison blanks in the kate 1894,1895,1896,1897 era of when they changed from single to double.  Up until about 1896 all blanks were Edison blanks, Columbia was still experimental in 1896, and really did not go full force in making there own blanks until about mid 1897.
National Phonograph Company brown wax blank circa 1900 note that it has double start spiral, the small end is different it drops of on more a slant than rounded over, when Edison adapted this change I am trying to figure out if anyone will cooperate and share if they know of Edison blanks in the kate 1894,1895,1896,1897 era of when they changed from single to double. Up until about 1896 all blanks were Edison blanks, Columbia was still experimental in 1896, and really did not go full force in making there own blanks until about mid 1897.
Early Columbia brown wax, circa 1897-early 1898 with the two North Americans, notice that this Columbia (the lightest cylinder in the photo) has a even more dainty spiral than the NAPC blanks, slightly shorter, and the diameter is only 2.135 even though it has the original factory Laughing song by George W Johnson on it, so neither are an early Columbia blank.  Later Edison's are ruled out as they have a double spiral.
Early Columbia brown wax, circa 1897-early 1898 with the two North Americans, notice that this Columbia (the lightest cylinder in the photo) has a even more dainty spiral than the NAPC blanks, slightly shorter, and the diameter is only 2.135 even though it has the original factory Laughing song by George W Johnson on it, so neither are an early Columbia blank. Later Edison's are ruled out as they have a double spiral.
Two North Americans with a circa 1899 Columbia brown wax, note the Columbia spiral is more clunky , slightly wider, than the North American blanks, so NOT Columbia products.
Two North Americans with a circa 1899 Columbia brown wax, note the Columbia spiral is more clunky , slightly wider, than the North American blanks, so NOT Columbia products.
The beveled ends on the North American Blanks.  Note they match up, the same, one is lighter than the other blank. Both though have interesting pour streaks inside on the spiral portion of the blank, a dark wax streak.
The beveled ends on the North American Blanks. Note they match up, the same, one is lighter than the other blank. Both though have interesting pour streaks inside on the spiral portion of the blank, a dark wax streak.
On the left is the North American blank from the recent auction, the channel is precision made, possibly moulded in the blank, or carefully smoothed out with cotton after being roughed in.  It is a single spiral blank.  The blank on the right has the same spiral however the channel is rough cut, thought is was fake, however may be very early, note the air bubble in the end.   It has the same spiral same size and ends.  Neither is a Columbia blank, and neither is a later Edison blank tampered with as after 1896 Edison blanks are double spiraled.
On the left is the North American blank from the recent auction, the channel is precision made, possibly moulded in the blank, or carefully smoothed out with cotton after being roughed in. It is a single spiral blank. The blank on the right has the same spiral however the channel is rough cut, thought is was fake, however may be very early, note the air bubble in the end. It has the same spiral same size and ends. Neither is a Columbia blank, and neither is a later Edison blank tampered with as after 1896 Edison blanks are double spiraled.

User avatar
Lucius1958
Victor Monarch
Posts: 4084
Joined: Tue Dec 14, 2010 12:17 am
Location: Where there's "hamburger ALL OVER the highway"...

Re: Original North American cylinder?

Post by Lucius1958 »

Considering that the cylinder was possibly less than 20 years old when it was recorded on, I don't think anyone would have given it a second thought. It wasn't a "historic artifact" at the time: just another cylinder which happened to be available.

Bill

User avatar
edisonphonoworks
Victor IV
Posts: 1566
Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2009 10:50 am
Personal Text: A new blank with authentic formula and spiral core!
Contact:

Re: Original North American cylinder?

Post by edisonphonoworks »

I am still wondering what observations others have seen with cylinders, as to tiny almost imperceptible differences, but differences none the less. Observations about spiral differences, channeled rim differences, defects found in blanks.

So we see

North American Edison single spiral and all very near 4 ¼" long, and from 2.150-2.1805" in diameter rounded over edge more reddish color, or salmon for lighter ones.


Columbia early brown wax most under 4 ¼" from 2.130-2.150" in diameter, dainty single spiral, tend to be lighter brown wax, a more brownish color, but not coppery.

Later Columbia brown wax cut 1899+ bigger single spiral, 4 ¼" length rounded over edge and vary from cream to dark brown (they started cooking up to 475F.)


Later Edison blanks 1896+???? double spiral 4 ¼" long, 2.150-2.1855" cream to dark brown, many a orange cast to the brown.

Post Reply