Thank you. I may go to a thrift store and see if I can find a pair of leather soled shoes to cut up. I could use a plug cutter on my drill press to cut several round pieces from up in the arch area where the soles seldom wear. There is also a shoe repair shop a few blocks away which might be a cheaper and easier option.
Or I could go to a pool hall and see if I can buy a cue tip to try adapting. If I use a Brunswick cue tip, I wonder if if would improve the sound and performance of my machine.

My arm is intact except for some plating. I am very careful with it.Inigo wrote: Fri Apr 15, 2022 12:47 pm My machine is 100 years old now, probably more, and hasn't had any issues except three:
The pot metal tonearm is broken, and the back support too. I've managed to get a new complete assembly from Canada (Angelo Raffin) with which I'll replaced mine, as it is much better made and the metal is thicker and very solid with no issues. Pity it is nickel plated, so I'll have to make it look golden.
I wonder what your new arm would look like if you carefully dismantled it all, cleaned it thoroughly, and took the pieces to a jeweller for gilding with gold leaf.
My Graduola is still working perfectly, but the cloth sleeve is fraying a bit next to the control and next to where it connects to the linkage inside, the two places it probably receives the most stress. I am slightly worried about this, but any serious problem is a ways off, yet.Inigo wrote: Fri Apr 15, 2022 12:47 pm The graduola wire cloth sleeve is peeled at some parts, so it doesn't work properly, for the cloth serves the purpose of fixing the outer wire while you push the inner wire, working in tension. Works like the bike brake wire.
I had covered it with black electrical tape, but this falls off with time, leaving a sticky residue. I have to glue black cloth strips or something that looks similar and corrects the issue.
Yes. The brace for keeping the lids on A-V machines seems to be a point of weakness. In my search for information about my machine, I have seen a number of these broken. I should look for a spare for mine.Inigo wrote: Fri Apr 15, 2022 12:47 pm The lid stay retainer at the motorboard was long time broken. I can manage to support the free end so it works. I also acquired a new lid support, but the end father to the lid is of another type, and it cannot be attached to my lid, as it was made for a pagoda lid, and its suitably inclined. I need to make a wooden wedge or something so I can attach it to my lid.
I think so, too. My soundbox could probably be improved with a rebuild, but it is working quite well enough at present. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." I don't have a problem with the horn, per se, because I have the machine in a fairly small room, and it is way too loud if I use anything but extra-soft or soft-tone needles. If I use a medium or loud tone needle, I can hear the machine loudly everywhere in the house. The resonances don't seem to be a problem at lower volumes or when listening from other rooms. There was a lovely sound box that came up on EBay not too long ago. It needed a rebuild, but it had pretty much all its plating intact - very nice looking. I thought about buying it, but the cost would have been more than I paid for my whole machine.Inigo wrote: Fri Apr 15, 2022 12:47 pm The soundbox is very good, and the square conical horn is big, and it sounds great even with electrical recordings, except for that ringing resonance of this type of horns.
If your horn has wolf-tones at particular pitches, you could try experimenting with Blu Tack putty, the soft reusable adhesive for putting up posters and such. Try sticking a big piece or two on the horn and test and experiment with moving them around. Blu Tack can be be quite effective at damping some types of wolf-tones. I use it on a seasonally problematic acoustic guitar.
You are probably right. My old AR turntable and my Ariston RD11 (basically a Linn LP12) had heavy flywheel platters and both were balanced. You could see the machining done to balance them. But here there were probably two concerns, flywheel speed control on a belt drive turntable and rumble reduction from the bearings, Generally level and balanced is good for turntables. But a talking machine is direct drive and is already quite mechanically noisy. And the greatest mechanical noise is that generated by sound box which is why you don't really hear the other noise once the lid is down.Inigo wrote: Fri Apr 15, 2022 12:47 pm About the platter... at these slow speeds, I don't think perfect balancing is needed...