A Tale of Two Edison A-100's

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Zenger
Victor II
Posts: 246
Joined: Mon Apr 22, 2019 7:50 pm

A Tale of Two Edison A-100's

Post by Zenger »

Over the years I've picked up two unrestored Edison A-100 phonographs. The older one (SN 12798) has a diamond-shaped decal on the lower-left corner of the bedplate, but the newer one (SN 44158) had a strange-looking clip instead, and I can't figure out what it was supposed to be used for. I'm not even sure if it's original to the machine, or if someone added it later. Can anyone tell me?

I was considering combining the two into one machine, using the best components from each. Is disassembling/re-assembling the motor/horn assembly terribly complicated?

Another thing: The newer machine was missing its original reproducer (it had a lateral adapter instead) while the older machine came with the gold-plated reproducer you see in the pictures. I was under the impression that these came with nickel-plated hardware. Was this reproducer a later replacement, or did some go out with gold-plated reproducers?

Also: Was Edison pretty uniform with their platter felt, or did they modify the shade and even color at different times?

Finally, is there any way to date these two machines based on the serial numbers? I can't find any information on this in the Frow book.

Thanks!
Attachments
A-100 1a.jpg
A-100 1b.jpg
A-100 2a.jpg
A-100 2b.jpg

pallophotophone
Victor II
Posts: 364
Joined: Tue Aug 14, 2018 7:35 pm
Location: Syracuse N.Y.

Re: A Tale of Two Edison A-100's

Post by pallophotophone »

Hi,
The answer to one of those questions is an easy one. The clip thing is what's left from a relatively modern tonearm -probably from the 1940's. It's the rear bearing made up of the 2 cone shaped bits. See if it will just break off with a little persuasion. The cast iron is tougher than it is, unless someone welded it on. It's anything but original.

pallophotophone
Victor II
Posts: 364
Joined: Tue Aug 14, 2018 7:35 pm
Location: Syracuse N.Y.

Re: A Tale of Two Edison A-100's

Post by pallophotophone »

pallophotophone wrote:Hi,
The answer to one of those questions is an easy one. The clip thing is what's left from a relatively modern tonearm -probably from the 1940's. It's the rear bearing made up of the 2 cone shaped bits. See if it will just break off with a little persuasion. The cast iron is tougher than it is, unless someone welded it on. It's anything but original.
On second look I'd say it's epoxy.

52089
Victor VI
Posts: 3836
Joined: Mon Oct 03, 2011 7:54 pm

Re: A Tale of Two Edison A-100's

Post by 52089 »

The reproducer finish should match the finish on the horn ferrule, which is nickel. If it were me, I would find a good nickel reproducer for the older machine and then just do the usual cleanup and maintenance on it.

IIRC, the bedplate decals were phased out around 1915-1917.

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