soundgen wrote:every time we went in the motors were completely wound down , speed controls altered so they wouldn't play properly when staff ( unfamiliar with gramophones ) tried to demonstrate them , a real nightmare
I can remember many years ago a collector friend of mine had a booth inside a large multi-dealer antique shop with a few of his Victrolas for sale with records mounted on each of them. He told me that he always had a needle mounted in the sound box for each and he placed a little bent piece of cardboard on the turntable with "Please ask front desk for assistance to demonstrate". The front desk person had all of the cranks.
Well, it seems there was a devious competing phonograph dealer in the same antique shop who would always secretly remove the needle in all of my buddy's Victrolas and he would replace each needle in each sound box
upside down so that anytime the person at the front desk wanted to demonstrate one of his Victrolas for a customer the Victrola would sound awful or not play at all! The front desk person always complained to my friend that his Victrolas needed repair and on inspection he would always find the needle was upside down in the sound box.

Oh boy...
Doug