Dan,
This machine was given to me about 15 years ago by a friend of mine who found it somewhere in the Pocono Mountains of Northeast Pennsylvania.
When I got it, the motor was laying in pieces in the cavity under the motorboard.
The pot-metal parts are in surprisingly good condition.
I figured-out how to get the motor back together (it's a two-spring Heinemann), and had to send the governor to Wyatt's for new springs for the weights.
It has never run very well; the motor seems to change speed ("WOW") every couple of revolutions of the turn-table.
After I shot these pictures, I tried playing the machine again, and futzed with the governor a bit, but still could not get it to maintain a steady speed.
Frankly, I'm not terribly impressed with the whole machine; I think the build-quality is quite a bit higher with Victor, Edison, and Brunswick machines... the motors are certainly stouter in those machines. I do not know how it compared in price to the "big Three".
I would not be inclined to spend much money on a Pathéphone like the one I have; mine will be a guinea-pig for cabinet refinishing, or it may hibernate until I find a better home for it.
It is the first Pathéphone I have run across in thirty-some years of casual collecting, so I don't have much experience with them; perhaps I'm being unjustly harsh in my judgement of them based on this one sad soldier.
Perhaps we'll hear from someone more knowledgeable ?
