And a cute Brunswick console, for $75!
http://washingtondc.craigslist.org/nva/ ... 30422.html . Worth that, just for the Ultona box.[/quote]
That Brunswick is about an hour away from me, and if you wanted a nice daily driver phonograph, it's a good deal. It's about a 1924 model, so the Ultona reproducer may not have the angled needle chuck for the Pathé ball stylus. By that date, I think Pathé had already converted to the lateral recording method, and Brunswick probably didn't feel any need to keep the ball stylus chuck on there. IIRC, this is the Brunswick BR-160 model, BR = Brunswick Radiola. The Radiola panel resided in the left compartment, and was a battery powered set. The batteries were accessed via a removable compartment door in the back of the console. The tonearm may well be gold-plated brass, not the usual pot metal---I have seen several that were---although the Ultona reproducer will be of the usual nickel plated pot metal alloy construction. Locating, servicing and obtaining parts and tubes to restore the Radiola option will probably be time consuming and expensive. Those 199 tubes aren't what you'd call "free" these days. For those that want to know more, The Radiola used was RCA's AR-812 superheterodyne, rebadged and reconfigured for Brunswick as the AR-813.
If one of the members on here buys this to part it out, the driver for the radio (permits the radio to use the same oval horn as the phonograph) will be of interest to some radio collectors, as will the conical "valve" that makes the switch between the two functions. It's a handsome cabinet design, and a bit large to call "cute". With several Brunswick consoles already awaiting my attention, I can't buy it myself, but I have been sorely tempted. It IS a good deal.