I bought this 1918 VV-IVA a couple weeks ago at an antique store. I almost missed it because it was on the bottom shelf. It did not have a reproducer, but had the remainder of an Exhibition's flange gasket. The motor runs well and it sounds really good with a freshly rebuild reproducer installed. I also replaced the tone arm ball bearings and adjusted a slight bend in the base of the tonearm.
I'm not sure it is has been refinished, but the wood grain looks like oak, while the finish looks like mahogany.
Recent Acquisition - Victor VV-IV
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- Victor II
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- Victor VI
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Re: Recent Acquisition - Victor VV-IV
*”Flange gasket” = ‘isolator’
"All of us have a place in history. Mine is clouds." Richard Brautigan
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- Victor VI
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Re: Recent Acquisition - Victor VV-IV
Neat little Victrola--I think the finish is pretty as is. Are you going to be preserving it as-is, or freshening up the cosmetics too? It is at that point where it could go either way. It looks like it was made for that spot it's in now; nice display with the vintage lamp and needle tin.
How did you fix a bent tonearm? Reason I ask is, a collector acquaintance & Forum member gave me a VV-IV from 1917, which I just couldn't turn down even though I've put a pause on more phonographs. It got tore up by FedEx when he got it so it comes with a bonus of a slightly wobbly platter, crushed corner carvings on the top board, and (drumroll) slightly bent tonearm. Did you make a jig, or just brute-force it?
I also see a Smith-Premier typewriter, and it looks like one of the late ball-bearing models with a single four-bank keyboard, basically an old Monarch like P.G. Wodehouse used to use. THAT is also a cool find, and I'm low-key jealous. (I seriously love typewriters.)
How did you fix a bent tonearm? Reason I ask is, a collector acquaintance & Forum member gave me a VV-IV from 1917, which I just couldn't turn down even though I've put a pause on more phonographs. It got tore up by FedEx when he got it so it comes with a bonus of a slightly wobbly platter, crushed corner carvings on the top board, and (drumroll) slightly bent tonearm. Did you make a jig, or just brute-force it?
I also see a Smith-Premier typewriter, and it looks like one of the late ball-bearing models with a single four-bank keyboard, basically an old Monarch like P.G. Wodehouse used to use. THAT is also a cool find, and I'm low-key jealous. (I seriously love typewriters.)
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- Victor II
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- Joined: Thu Nov 16, 2017 7:57 pm
- Location: Connecticut
Re: Recent Acquisition - Victor VV-IV
That’s my Smith Premier 10 in the background with double keyboard. A nice machine to study and use.VanEpsFan1914 wrote:Neat little Victrola--I think the finish is pretty as is. Are you going to be preserving it as-is, or freshening up the cosmetics too? It is at that point where it could go either way. It looks like it was made for that spot it's in now; nice display with the vintage lamp and needle tin.
How did you fix a bent tonearm? Reason I ask is, a collector acquaintance & Forum member gave me a VV-IV from 1917, which I just couldn't turn down even though I've put a pause on more phonographs. It got tore up by FedEx when he got it so it comes with a bonus of a slightly wobbly platter, crushed corner carvings on the top board, and (drumroll) slightly bent tonearm. Did you make a jig, or just brute-force it?
I also see a Smith-Premier typewriter, and it looks like one of the late ball-bearing models with a single four-bank keyboard, basically an old Monarch like P.G. Wodehouse used to use. THAT is also a cool find, and I'm low-key jealous. (I seriously love typewriters.)
The arm wasn’t actually bent. I should have said the ‘bell-shaped-part’ of the arm was slightly bent at the base. The rim of it was just slightly out of round and I bent it back into shape with a pair of needle nose pliers.
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- Victor VI
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- Personal Text: I've got both kinds of music--classical & rag-time.
- Location: South Carolina
Re: Recent Acquisition - Victor VV-IV
DOUBLE keyboard! Wow, my ID skills are pretty rusty. I'm surprised you're still using it; lots of people don't think the early dual-keyboard machines are really OK to use. That must be an interesting machine to use.
Thanks for the details on fixing the tone arms on the VV-IV's; I may have to take mine apart & see. I haven't pulled it apart yet. Always kind of neat to see collectors fixing up VV-IV's along with the bigger and more valuable machines.
Thanks for the details on fixing the tone arms on the VV-IV's; I may have to take mine apart & see. I haven't pulled it apart yet. Always kind of neat to see collectors fixing up VV-IV's along with the bigger and more valuable machines.
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- Victor II
- Posts: 208
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- Location: Connecticut
Re: Recent Acquisition - Victor VV-IV
I have heard people say that about the SP10, but really it’s not bad once you get used to the slightly different placement of the keys.VanEpsFan1914 wrote:DOUBLE keyboard! Wow, my ID skills are pretty rusty. I'm surprised you're still using it; lots of people don't think the early dual-keyboard machines are really OK to use. That must be an interesting machine to use.
Thanks for the details on fixing the tone arms on the VV-IV's; I may have to take mine apart & see. I haven't pulled it apart yet. Always kind of neat to see collectors fixing up VV-IV's along with the bigger and more valuable machines.
I forgot to answer your question earlier. I am going to leave the machine exactly as it is. So far, I have only wiped down the cabinet with Howard Feed-N-Wax. It seemed to clean up the finish from when I first got it.