What is the most amazing bargain or discovery you have ever had as a talking machine and/or record collector?
Likewise...What's the worst purchase or experience you have ever had as a talking machine and/or record collector?
My best personal experience was buying my Victrola about 6 years ago for just $78.
My worst was about 20 years ago when I had a financial emergency and sold my really nice, fully restored, Edison Standard with large witches hat bell for just $100 cash.
The Ups & Downs of Collecting Talking Machines.
- 1923VictorFan
- Victor II
- Posts: 242
- Joined: Wed Jun 01, 2011 10:01 am
- Personal Text: I'm not better than you, I'm just different from you in ways that are better..
- Location: Springfield, Missouri
The Ups & Downs of Collecting Talking Machines.
It's not that I'm better than you. I'm just different from you in a way that's better. - Russel Brand
- VintageTechnologies
- Victor IV
- Posts: 1651
- Joined: Thu Jul 14, 2011 12:09 pm
Re: The Ups & Downs of Collecting Talking Machines.
I made several amazing finds over the years, but I burnt up a lot of shoe leather.
1) Walking the aisles at an antiques mall, I spotted a bushel-sized wicker basket filled with cylinder cartons. I asked the dealer how much, and she said $5 each. I noticed going through a few cartons that all the wax cylinders looked clean. Suddenly I pulled out a pink cylinder! And then another, and another. I never got to the bottom of the basket. I just calmly returned what I had looked at and said, how much each if I buy the whole basket? She said $3. Done deal. I got home and discovered 10 Pink Lamberts and 3 black ones, most in original cartons with lids.
2) I went to a huge antiques/garage sale show and found someone with several large boxes of cylinders. $3.50 each. I took home Shacketon's My South Polar Expedition and 12 or 13 Edison 2M Blue Amberol cylinders, all in Spanish.
3) At a public auction 30 years ago, I paid $2 for an Edison private label disk of the Drury High School Band, from North Adams, Massachusetts. I didn't really know what I was buying, it was just a hunch that it was something good. Later research revealed that probably only 300 copies had been pressed. There are at least 3 or 4 other existing copies that I have heard about, including one at that school. I sold mine 10 years ago on eBay for $500.
1) Walking the aisles at an antiques mall, I spotted a bushel-sized wicker basket filled with cylinder cartons. I asked the dealer how much, and she said $5 each. I noticed going through a few cartons that all the wax cylinders looked clean. Suddenly I pulled out a pink cylinder! And then another, and another. I never got to the bottom of the basket. I just calmly returned what I had looked at and said, how much each if I buy the whole basket? She said $3. Done deal. I got home and discovered 10 Pink Lamberts and 3 black ones, most in original cartons with lids.
2) I went to a huge antiques/garage sale show and found someone with several large boxes of cylinders. $3.50 each. I took home Shacketon's My South Polar Expedition and 12 or 13 Edison 2M Blue Amberol cylinders, all in Spanish.
3) At a public auction 30 years ago, I paid $2 for an Edison private label disk of the Drury High School Band, from North Adams, Massachusetts. I didn't really know what I was buying, it was just a hunch that it was something good. Later research revealed that probably only 300 copies had been pressed. There are at least 3 or 4 other existing copies that I have heard about, including one at that school. I sold mine 10 years ago on eBay for $500.
-
- Victor V
- Posts: 2708
- Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2011 11:23 pm
- Location: NW Indiana VV-IV;
Re: The Ups & Downs of Collecting Talking Machines.
Some interesting stuff.....
My best deal for a phonograph, I think it was a Edison Chalet with complete about 50 records for $ 300.00 I do not regret this at all, the grill and everything looks good.
The worst experience, was a Silvertone table model phonograph on e-bay for $200.00 The lid was puffed up, the grill all broken, looked like the sides were gorilla glued and has a broken pot metal arm. I started attempting to work on it, I stripped it, stained it, bought a arm for $ 50.00 on ebay, and ooohh boy did I invest about $400-600 easily, well i ended up selling it to someone for parts on ebay for i think around $ 80.00. the ebay picture looked better than the machine was.
Ebay has been ok to me, the prices can be a killer but over-all its not too bad, i just try to look at as many photos as i can. I think Silvertones are junky if you ask me.
My best deal for a phonograph, I think it was a Edison Chalet with complete about 50 records for $ 300.00 I do not regret this at all, the grill and everything looks good.
The worst experience, was a Silvertone table model phonograph on e-bay for $200.00 The lid was puffed up, the grill all broken, looked like the sides were gorilla glued and has a broken pot metal arm. I started attempting to work on it, I stripped it, stained it, bought a arm for $ 50.00 on ebay, and ooohh boy did I invest about $400-600 easily, well i ended up selling it to someone for parts on ebay for i think around $ 80.00. the ebay picture looked better than the machine was.
Ebay has been ok to me, the prices can be a killer but over-all its not too bad, i just try to look at as many photos as i can. I think Silvertones are junky if you ask me.
- 1926CredenzaOwner
- Victor II
- Posts: 237
- Joined: Sun Apr 05, 2009 6:06 am