I am an avid radio collector also so I just had to have this...
I was also given the reproducer I needed from a friend. Yay!
Last I found a Victrola tonearm.
To go even further off topic, when I was a lad we lived in a big house on an acre lot. My dad bought a Gravely with the "drag behind" seat for cutting the grass. He decided that was MY job. I should be in therapy because that scarred me for life.De Soto Frank wrote:Not to drag your thread way off topic, here is a picture of said sediment-bowl... they are usually found on gasoline-powered equipment, with divorced fuel-tank, and float-type carb: stuff powered by larger (6 HP & up ) Briggs, Kohler, Wisconsin engines, etc.
The other big manufacturer of these little shut-off/sediment bowls was Tillotson, who also made carburetors. Tillotson was in Toledo, O, and Willys-Overland (Jeep) was a big customer.
Tillotson bowls are recognized by a wire bail under the glass bowl, Crippen used the flat-strap, and were about half the size of the Tillotson.
Anyone who has run a classic Gravely two-wheel walk-behind tractor has probably seen the Tillotson bowls, but Gravely also used Crippen bowls.
Both firms specialized in die-casting of intricate parts, so that makes me think that the Crippen who made the "Radio" reproducer also made the sediment bowls.
( How's that for arcane minutae ?)