Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

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Inigo
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Re: Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

Post by Inigo »

If it's not indiscreet... Johnsheff... How much will you charge for such a completely restored beauty? For sporting, I'd made an educated guess of... $7,500... Maybe I'm short... :D
Inigo

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Raphael
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Re: Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

Post by Raphael »

I believe this same phonograph is now on eBay at an extremely attractive price:

https://www.ebay.com/itm/1915-Victor-Vi ... SwADZfVuXE

It should sell very quickly.

Raphael

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Inigo
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Re: Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

Post by Inigo »

Ho, ho...! I believed it costed double! :oops:
Inigo

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fran604g
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Re: Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

Post by fran604g »

Stunning, Jon. I'm truly grateful you share your wonderful restorations with us.

You're a true craftsman.

Cheers,
Fran
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clevelander
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Re: Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

Post by clevelander »

Like most collectors, I'm not normally a fan of restored machines.
But that is SMART!

JerryVan
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Re: Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

Post by JerryVan »

We all like to find original condition machines. In my case, I don't mind a restored example, when it's done this well!

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marcapra
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Re: Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

Post by marcapra »

I also like original phonograph cabinets, but sometimes the cabinet is so bad it has to be restored. Very few people have a restoration done to the level of Jonsheff though. For example, I bought an Edison Opera in oak at the Stanton auction some years ago. It had already been refinished, both the cabinet and the motor board. The work was worse than amateurish. It needed a complete refinish. Uncle Vanya was nice enough to offer to do the work. He did a superb job on the cabinet, the horn, and the motor board, and the job is so nice no one ever says to me "Oh it's been refinished". It just looks perfect. Here's a look at his work on the motor board.
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Jonsheff
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Re: Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

Post by Jonsheff »

marcapra wrote:I also like original phonograph cabinets, but sometimes the cabinet is so bad it has to be restored. Very few people have a restoration done to the level of Jonsheff though. For example, I bought an Edison Opera in oak at the Stanton auction some years ago. It had already been refinished, both the cabinet and the motor board. The work was worse than amateurish. It needed a complete refinish. Uncle Vanya was nice enough to offer to do the work. He did a superb job on the cabinet, the horn, and the motor board, and the job is so nice no one ever says to me "Oh it's been refinished". It just looks perfect. Here's a look at his work on the motor board.
That is really nice work, did he paint the gold by hand? If so, thats a real skill i tried but couldnt master on my clock repairs. I use a process on my clocks that might work great for scroll work on these type motor boards: scan the board, fix scroll work using photo shop, delete everything except the scrollwork and save as png. Import into cricut and use a cricut printer (cuts instead of printing) to cut a stencil on adhesive backed mylar. Lay stencil on painted motor board and spray with design master gold paint. Here is an example
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Jonsheff
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Re: Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

Post by Jonsheff »

Here is something on the Victrola XVIII i did that might surprise some. The rear doors were missing the trim at the bottom. Finding rear doors for an 18 is nearly impossible. I contacted several mills to get them custom made but the prices were outrageous. I have woodworking skills but carving is not one of them. What i ended up doing was removed the top trim from one of the doors, used silicone mold material to make a mold of the trim. Poured fiberglass resin mixed with sanding dust from the unit and hardener into the mold. Attached, dyed and finished doors, turned out perfect. Nearly impossible to tell difference between top and bottom trim.
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Re: Here is a fully restored XVIII fresh out of the shop

Post by Mormon S »

Jonsheff wrote:Here is something on the Victrola XVIII i did that might surprise some. The rear doors were missing the trim at the bottom. Finding rear doors for an 18 is nearly impossible. I contacted several mills to get them custom made but the prices were outrageous. I have woodworking skills but carving is not one of them. What i ended up doing was removed the top trim from one of the doors, used silicone mold material to make a mold of the trim. Poured fiberglass resin mixed with sanding dust from the unit and hardener into the mold. Attached, dyed and finished doors, turned out perfect. Nearly impossible to tell difference between top and bottom trim.
Absolutely fantastic work. I thought of doing the same with the partially missing foot on my VV-XVII, but I don't think I could match it without refinishing.

Martin

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