It looks really nice even without the missing parts

I essentially had to scrape the paint down with a scalpel until I reached the shellac layer. Unfortunately I did chip of some decal and finish in some areas, but it was almost inevitable and its hard to see from normal distances. I'm not completely sure what type of paint it was, but it was really stuck on there and didn't chip off in segmentsZwebie wrote:Beautiful Job!
How in the world did you ever remove the paint splatters from the decal without damaging it?
Bob S.
I used brasso for some basic polishing. I know its not great for high end restorations and is high on abrasives, However Its cheap and works great for casual use and cleaning. Here is a picture with the horn I need. I want one that needs restoration since I want a little bit of artistic liberty. I think it would look beautiful if it had flowers on the side like the horns made by the Standard Metal Manufacturing Company.phonosandradios wrote:The plating around the edge of the soundbox really did come up well. Did you just use metal polish to remove the dirt and buff it up? What kind of horn would go with this machine?
It looks really nice even without the missing parts
Hi TomPhonotom wrote:Martin, Here is a picture with the top arm like yours. I reproduced about 100 sets of these arms. Mine had an aluminum cradle that stuck into the hole. Mine also had the bottom arm that said Columbia though. I also included a picture of the Columbia AJ arms that I use to reproduce. Yours look good the way it is. I would leave it that way. GOOD FIND!!! Tom
ditto!oliver wrote:Spectacular transformation! Congratulations on such a fine acqiuisition.