The motor, for crying out loud, is a DOUBLE-SPRING made by Paillard. Has an adaptive tone arm with 2 tubes for converting the soundbox between the Pathé and Victor positions. The soundbox is original to the unit; a Paillard Maestrophone "Maestoso." Later Sonora machines utilize the same soundbox, but instead of printing "Maestoso" on the soundbox label, the word "Sonora" was used. The automatic brake is simplicity itself. When the tone arm tracks to the extreme left, it pushes the brake release upward and then, "CLICK" the brake activates.
Her are photos of the machine, its spring-cord driven feed screw (which is UNDER the motorboard!), and of its swivel joint in the aluminium tone arm. The swivel allows the reproducer a few degrees of Up/Down, and Left/Right movement (too much in fact to have avoided the Victor patent infringement). But now, after nearly 100 years of sitting, the pot metal joint has expanded and seized. I'll see about oiling it and pressing it out. I suspect the pot metal will crush and disintegrate, behooving me to have new parts made in brass.





