I recently found this rare mahogany Victor V through a Kansas online estate auction company listing last week. More accurately, a friend of mine who doesn't collect anything music related stumbled upon the listing for it while looking for old film equipment listings, contacted me right away saying "you should take a look at this, they're selling an 1800s wind-up Victrola with the big horn in front"* and sent me the link for the posting. I made an offer I thought was reasonable for it, and evidently the listing manager approved of my offer since they were kind enough to ship it priority mail to me the same day I bought it!
As you can see, this once-proud unit catering to only the wealthiest of record buyers is rusty, crusty, tired and absolutely filthy. It was delivered to me and unpacked today, and the very first thing I had to do was leave it on my back porch with the window open to let it air out for several hours because it STUNK more than our current President's approval rating! It smelled like mold and dried cat urine (and still does, though not as strongly), and the summer heat concentrating the rancid smell inside the airtight shipping box for a week while it was in transit did not help. Interestingly, the Exhibition reproducer has been recently rebuilt, and there is a dealer's decal in the upper right corner of the motorboard stating it was originally sold through a music company in Philadelphia. (How and why this phonograph traveled from Philly to Kansas I have no clue!)
I'll revive this phonograph as much as I am able, and document all the steps along the way. I have previously restored a Victor 0 that arrived to me completely unusable, and fixed it up into something that looks like it stepped out of a time capsule (true humble bragging). Based on my initial findings of this machine, there is no reason why it can't be saved and given a similar restoration job.
This phonograph also appears to be a very late production model, as indicated by the fact that it has the same "yielding" turntable system which Victor previously reserved for its VI model, production of which ceased in 1915 AFAIK. However, it does not have a semi-automatic brake like the only other mahogany Victor V I've seen had, so the exact year of its manufacture is anyone's guess until I can clean up the ID tag and look at the serial number. I also assume that for the few remaining customers who still wanted an external horn phonograph after WWI but before the Orthophonic era, this was Victor's TOTL model since I am not aware of any special-order Victor VIs made during that same time period.
In prepping this player for upcoming Day One of restoration, I have removed the reproducer, pulled off the old rotten turntable felt, and removed all metal hardware except the winding crank, motorboard hinges, horn, turntable and tonearm/back bracket. I put them in a plastic baggie so they stay together and don't get any other surfaces dirty in the meantime. I plan on cleaning and polishing the small metal components first before working my up to the larger tasks of rejuvenating the cabinet and horn, cleaning and re-lubricating the motor, and then calibrating everything back together so this unit can sing again like it did nearly (over?) a century ago. Using a crappy test record I don't care about (Bing Crosby 78s are good for something after all!), I was able to confirm that the motor does have enough power to be able to make it through at least two sides of a 10" 78 without any noticeable speed fluctuations or thudding/banging, so I know the mainsprings likely won't need any work.
I plan on starting Day One restoration either tomorrow after work (29-July-2020) and/or using the afternoon of 1-Aug-2020 to get it done. Needless to say, if anyone reading this wants to offer me their two cents on how to transform this from a toad into a prince, please don't hesitate to share!
*Not to worry, after thanking him for sending me the listing, I did educate him about how this isn't a Victrola, doesn't have the horn in front of the cabinet, and certainly is not from the 1800s. He then asked if he could come hear it play after I fix it up since he wanted to hear which of my vinyl albums would sound the best on it...
