OK, this thread brings back some guilt and a moment of sheer terror...
A few years ago I bought a really really nice original Victor V with a spearpoint horn. I try not to keep duplicates and I also had a Victor V with a spearpoint horn. I agonized over which one to keep. My first Victor V was purchased over fifty years ago. It had a very amateurish gold paint job and was missing the horn. I gave it nothing but love and my very first major refinishing effort. Over the years I've displayed it with several horns. After agonizing for some time I decided to sell the better of the two machines.
I advertised it here in the Trader section of the TMF and sold the machine. I agreed to deliver it to the old Union show, several months away, and received a small deposit. I carefully packed the machine to be placed in my cargo trailer and not touched until it was unloaded in the Union parking lot. I am careful and consistent with my packing but there is a difference between packing an item to be commercially shipped and another for personal delivery.
A short time passed and I had the opportunity to buy a second style VTLA. Who can turn down a VTLA, even one that needed a bit of gluing? The gluing could be accomplished by removing the lid, applying some glue, placing a piece of plywood on the Victrola, and adding weight on top. For weight I sat two tubs containing phono items for Union, and placing the Victor V which was in a carton surrounded by a blanket.
DeeDee and I had some errands, got in her car, and I pressed the button to bring the garage door down. I watched in horror as the bar attached to the inside of the garage door swept the Victor V onto the cement floor. I raced to the carton and opened it. To my horror one corner absorbed to impact and was and was shattered.
I really try to take care of our phono treasures. I immediately returned the buyers deposit saying the machine was damaged. My next step was to take the machine to a local repairman that is amazing. While it was in his possession I received a call from another collector looking for a Victor V with a wood horn. I replied that I had one and confessed to being the person that did the damage. He next asked if I had taken a photo of the damage. My immediate thought was why would I want a photo to commemorate my stupidity? I agreed to send photos when I retrieved the machine. The repairman did a flawless repair. I took photos of all four corners and sent them to potential buyer. He replied that he would buy the machine. I replied that I was driving to California and I insisted that he inspect the machine before buying. He personally inspected the corners and could not tell which one was repaired and he bought the machine. It was a major repair that will be lost to history.
Many years ago, I attempted to sell an off brand, (Strand), floor model phonograph at a family garage sale. The sale was at my Aunt's home, so I needed to use my trailer to get it there and back again, since it didn't sell. For trip home, which was only 1 mile, I didn't think I needed to tie the phonograph down. After all, it was a "lowboy" style cabinet, so a lower center of gravity. WRONG. The very first turn I made, the machine flipped over the edge of the trailer and slid down the street on its lid. Yes, it was off-brand, in a less than desirable cabinet style, but its condition was absolutely flawless... until. I repaired and refinished the lid and eventually it did get sold, so at least my stupidity didn't completely finish it off.
I mean ive probably done some damage to my Columbia floating reproducer by dropping it onto the mandrel ( very early ownership ) but lucky me it hadn't sustained any damage. i also bought a entirely mold covered cylinder ( before i knew what it looked like and when i had only owned blue amberols and indestructibles). it was a very common gold molded cylinder and i sort of wanted to see what would happen if i dropped it from about a foot. long story short its in two pieces.
One time I also slightly tossed a 7" pre-1905 Columbia on the table and it cracked into 2. The label kept it together and I glued it. Still very audible.
Be sure to look up Samuel Murchison Seka on the interwebs for some music and phonograph reading material.
Recently while restoring my triple cracked Mahogany Opera horn after having reglued all the pieces back together I laid it over on the work table.....I watched in horror as it rolled in an arc off the table and broke again on the floor. Ultimately it was successfully restored.
Last year I broke the leg to my VV-111 while I was moving it to my current location, I was pushing it on it's casters (bad idea) and I hit a bump in the carpet and SNAP! The kicker is, I removed all the hardware in that machine to make sure that DIDN'T happen! Well the Gorilla Glue is still holding thankfully!