Django wrote: Wed Jan 04, 2023 6:14 pm
VanEpsFan1914 wrote: Wed Jan 04, 2023 2:56 pm
I actually quit collecting phonographs & now am planning on paring down the collection. I'm always fond of repairing them but I really don't want any more machines at the present. About to graduate college in May, and I want to move, get solidly in a good job, have phonographs but for heaven's sake not keep collecting the things.
They are fantastic to listen to & have in the house, but I definitely need to quit using phonographs & antiques in general as an unhealthy coping mechanism. Not that I plan on getting out of it altogether--this stuff is fun--but moderation in all things, right?
My rule about collecting is that they all have to be playable and accessible. They also have to be laid out in a ways that I like looking at them and I don’t find that they are in the way. Some of my cylinder machines are a little hard to reach, but if I want to play them, they can be taken down or I can use a step stool. If I get another machine, something will have to go, so it would have to be an upgrade. I am pretty attached to the current collection, so the new machine would have to be pretty special, (so I am out of room and this is my way of dealing with it). The VE-XVIII would be in danger of leaving if I found a nice, Oak VTLA, otherwise, I am in maintainable mode.
Absolutely wonderful idea! I'd have trouble exchanging the VE-XVIII for something like a VTLA though; but if you're more fond of a VTLA that sounds like a good plan. I love my 1914 XIV; it's about the perfect compromise between the plainer XI style and the massive XVI's. First machine I bought & definitely a workhorse.
I don't have a collection like that. I have things like--kerosene lamps I don't use due to the smoke from primitive burners, a 1920s radio cooked its power supply a few years ago, was disassembled for overhaul, a whole Toyota Corolla that "runs on nightmares," (as someone put it), yet more kerosene lamps, Edison Gem without a pulley, Standard B without a belt, fountain pens without gaskets or plungers--it's a nightmare of a collection & I built the whole thing as what looked like a high functioning version of hoarding.
The antiques have to be thinned down.
I started this mess when I was a scared messed-up teenager, didn't know I was going to fall in love in 2022 and that I was, actually, going to be on the route to finally graduate college. I did find a girlfriend last year (if you saw me with a lady at CAMPS '22, that's her; she's super nice & likes the phonographs a lot.) Trouble is, it's a bit more work trying to keep up with her.
So I have to take my leave of the splendid addiction, but still keep the best of the collection. The A-200, the Panatrope 15-8, the Columbia 202, the Victrola XIV, Victor III, Edison Home--those are fine machines. The trouble is that I get "attached" to stuff because I put work into it, saved it, did something to it. I don't want to get out of phonographs, but I am pulling myself out of the place my head was in--I didn't have a healthy attitude to collecting this stuff.
It got so bad I was buying stuff that I thought I liked only to realize I was doing it because I knew what something was or how it worked.
Combine that with having the executive functioning skills of a brain-damaged goldfish, making it difficult to put an eBay listing together (even though I can build an Edison Standard motor in about thirty minutes) and here we go, junk comes in, gets restored, but it doesn't go out.