CarlosV wrote: Mon Feb 09, 2026 3:27 pm
Steve wrote: Mon Feb 09, 2026 5:34 am
Yes, of course I know Christopher and I'm aware this sold previously in the early 70's, but what does that prove exactly? Some Frankenphones have been passed through more than one sale. As to the question, "why", I recall saying at the time, it obviously wasn't a fake made to fool anyone per se, but might conceivably have been a cobbled together machine, made by someone in the past with the wine cooler box and Deccalian innards, from a machine which could have been damaged. Who knows but stranger things have been seen.
Having seen it in person, I can say that it looks perfectly genuine, with no hint of alterations, chronological discrepancies, refittings or modifications that are normally visible in frankenphones, including the one that started this thread. The statement of the Decca executive descendant lends credence to its origins, but I agree that these one-off machines always carry some uncertainty concerning their provenance. However it sounds credible - and likely - to me that it is either a prototype that failed to pass into production, or a one-off made-to-order item assembled in a factory. I would certainly like to have it in my collection if I were a completist of Deccalian machines.
Thank you so much, Carlos, for sharing your opinion having had the privilege of seeing it in the flesh first hand. Like other members here I haven't seen it apart from in photos which were very poorly presented by the auctioneers.
Perhaps you can kindly throw some light on the question I have raised several times and which Roger has declined to respond to: do the lid panels either side of the dulciflex match the rest of it in terms of colour?
The photos I saw made them look much lighter. The thing which is slightly odd about it is the fact that the original Deccalian design was square in proportion and not rectangular, hence the dulciflex is located centrally in a square lid without any "infill" or redundant space on either side. The motorboard (from memory) is also square and normally sits neatly inside the lower case section. If I recall, in the Wine Cooler version, the same square motorboard is used - let's call it the "standard" type - but it does not fit perfectly within the rectangular cabinet without a picture frame around it. This frame is uneven in dimension on each side with a very thin strip along the front edge, which is a detail I didn't think looked right.
I do wonder if it was created as a prototype as you suggest and then a "production version" would have ironed out or made neater, some of these anomalies. However, it appears they didn't make any more.......that is until another one turns up in 2074.