1927 Victor 10-50 Orthophonic - Sound Quality Test - Video

Discussions on Talking Machines & Accessories
Post Reply
User avatar
Pierce-Arrow
Victor I
Posts: 121
Joined: Sat Apr 17, 2010 2:13 pm
Location: San Diego, CA

1927 Victor 10-50 Orthophonic - Sound Quality Test - Video

Post by Pierce-Arrow »

Hello fellow collectors,

I had this video filed away for some time. I like to share with you. Mechanically restored. Brass reproducer is a reproduction.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRx-ij8Wao4

Comments welcome.

Enjoy,

Keith :coffee:

melvind
Victor IV
Posts: 1325
Joined: Sun Mar 08, 2009 12:23 am

Re: 1927 Victor 10-50 Orthophonic - Sound Quality Test - Vid

Post by melvind »

Very nice sound and a very clean record. I like how well you could still hear the record all the way to the street from the garage.

I opened up the detail on your video and it made me laugh that YouTube identified the song as Schumann's Manfred when in fact it is the aria Amor ti vieta from the opera Fedora by Giordano. Nothing really to do with the video or the purpose of the video. I just found it amusing and shows there are flaws in YouTubes copyright matching software!

User avatar
AmberolaAndy
Victor V
Posts: 2706
Joined: Fri May 26, 2017 10:15 pm
Location: A small town near Omaha, Nebraska

Re: 1927 Victor 10-50 Orthophonic - Sound Quality Test - Vid

Post by AmberolaAndy »

Pierce-Arrow wrote:Hello fellow collectors,

I had this video filed away for some time. I like to share with you. Mechanically restored. Brass reproducer is a reproduction.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRx-ij8Wao4

Comments welcome.

Enjoy,

Keith :coffee:
That’s a nice one Keith. 8-) The things that scare me from this model is the pot metal parts in the changer and the not so kind way it rejects records. :shock: Plus family members objecting me from having another large machine...and money...that’s the reason I couldn’t get that Borgia II you have.

User avatar
phonosandradios
Victor II
Posts: 321
Joined: Fri Oct 11, 2019 4:49 pm
Personal Text: So many audio formats, so little listening time!
Location: Sunny Wiltshire. UK

Re: 1927 Victor 10-50 Orthophonic - Sound Quality Test - Vid

Post by phonosandradios »

Looks like a super clean machine you have there and it is surprising just how far the sound does travel! I guess the garage could be acting as an extension to the horn directing the sound down to the street. Also looks like you are having much better weather than we are here - flat grey cloud and cold to boot!
I am interested in all forms of audio media including: gramophones, phonographs, wire recorders, the tefifon, reel to reel tapes, radiograms and radios.

cheryla
Victor II
Posts: 420
Joined: Thu May 11, 2017 7:50 pm
Personal Text: YouTube: Dyslexic Genius Hurt
Location: Simpsonville, South Carolina

Re: 1927 Victor 10-50 Orthophonic - Sound Quality Test - Vid

Post by cheryla »

Very nice

User avatar
gramophone-georg
Victor Monarch
Posts: 4349
Joined: Mon Jan 20, 2014 11:55 pm
Personal Text: Northwest Of Normal
Location: Eugene/ Springfield Oregon USA

Re: 1927 Victor 10-50 Orthophonic - Sound Quality Test - Vid

Post by gramophone-georg »

AmberolaAndy wrote:
Pierce-Arrow wrote:Hello fellow collectors,

I had this video filed away for some time. I like to share with you. Mechanically restored. Brass reproducer is a reproduction.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRx-ij8Wao4

Comments welcome.

Enjoy,

Keith :coffee:
That’s a nice one Keith. 8-) The things that scare me from this model is the pot metal parts in the changer and the not so kind way it rejects records. :shock: Plus family members objecting me from having another large machine...and money...that’s the reason I couldn’t get that Borgia II you have.
Victrola Monkey has the pot metal problem pretty well solved with his new brass and aluminum parts. The fascinating thing about these early changers is that they DON'T break- or even really scratch- records. I have both a 10-50 and a 331 Duo record thrower and have yet to lose a record. The second design Victor changer that suspends the records over the turntable and can mix sizes IS a record cruncher, though, so avoid that one in my opinion.

What I like most about the first design (10-50 style) changer is the auto shut off feature after the last record. What I like least is that it only gets tripped by an eccentric stopping groove. The 331 Duo changes all records, but repeats the last one.

None of these changers do well with records that are any more than just slightly warped, and pre 1932 Columbias are pretty much a no go due to circumference and thickness differences.
"He who dies with the most shellac wins"- some nutty record geek

I got PTSD from Peter F's avatar

Post Reply