Feet
One last (I think) question. Should I try to replace the feet?
The eight feet on the case are quite worn and a bit crumbly. Set upright in suitcase orientation, the case partially rests on the hinges since the feet are now too thin to provide clearance. Set flat in play position, the case is a bit wobbly because the feet are uneven. Neither is a huge problem - nothing insurmountable.
I am torn between leaving it as is in all original condition (except for the three screws that secure the horn flange to the motorboard and the rust inhibiting paint on the flange) and replacing the feet for functional convenience.
Replacing the feet will be a pain because of the split-shaft clinch rivets. They will be challenging to extract without ripping the wood of the case. And in a number of places, it will be challenging to screw new feet in place because there is no clearance between the wood of the case and the horn. There are ways around this: using a countersink bit or a forstner bit to create a recess inside the case for either a tapered machine screw head or a nut and washer. But then the wood of the case is not that thick.
Or I could be lazy and unambitious and just get a variety of different thickness of peel and stick furniture felts (the ones that regularly fall off) and replace them as needed.
Or I could do nothing other than store the machine flat in play position and level and stabilise it with cardboard shims when in use - even lazier and less ambitious - but perhaps the most practical solution.
Thoughts/Opinions?