“On This Day in the History of Recorded Sound…”
January 18, 1908: Edward F. Leeds and George Rumpf filed a U.S. Patent application (later granted as #897,836) for a disc talking machine whose sound box remained stationary while the turntable traversed beneath it. Designed to avoid infringement of Berliner’s U.S. Patent that controlled any talking machine whose needle/stylus was propelled by a record’s groove, the machine was briefly marketed as an Aretino in 1908/09, and bears the distinction of being the first true mechanical feed disc talking machine known to have reached the marketplace. For much more: https://forum.antiquephono.org/topic/66 ... mment-3090
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Moving-Turntable Aretino
- phonogfp
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Re: Moving-Turntable Aretino
Very interesting mechanism. Thanks for posting.
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Re: Moving-Turntable Aretino
An attempt to get around the Victor patents? edisonplayer.
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Re: Moving-Turntable Aretino
Thanks for your post. I didn't realize those machines were that late probably because rear mount machines were well established by 1908.
Thanks, Jerry B.
Thanks, Jerry B.
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Re: Moving-Turntable Aretino
Amazingly, there are TWO different styles of motors for these rare machines. I've rebuilt both variations in the distant past.
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- phonogfp
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Re: Moving-Turntable Aretino
You're welcome, Ken.
Absolutely.edisonplayer wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 9:24 am An attempt to get around the Victor patents? edisonplayer.
You're welcome Jerry. The moving-turntable Aretino was Hawthorne & Sheble's last gasp for survival in the face of Victor's legal onslaught. It's a flimsy, cheaply-made machine; possibly only a trial balloon to see if it could circumvent Victor's US Patent #534543. I've often wondered, had it been successful, if H&S might have incorporated the design in its Star machines. A guy can dream...Jerry B. wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 9:42 am Thanks for your post. I didn't realize those machines were that late probably because rear mount machines were well established by 1908.
Thanks, Jerry B.
phonospud wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 1:15 pm Amazingly, there are TWO different styles of motors for these rare machines. I've rebuilt both variations in the distant past.
I wonder if the earlier variation was really worse than the later one!
George P.