gramophoneshane wrote:It really is a beautiful machine. I bet that bedplate is the best of the surviving examples that around today.
When most people would have been discarding these for landfill or a damp basement, Mr Wilmouth obviously respecting & took great care of this example.
I can't help but wonder, with the bedplate in such immaculate condition, and even having the original power cord, what happened to the original cabinet & why did he choose to reproduce a Concert/Opera cabinet instead of the Alva cabinet?
I suppose woodworm might have been responsible for destroyed the cabinet while leaving the mechanism untouched, but the choice for the replacement seems a little odd. Then again, I'd image back in the 1930s, total aesthetic originality probably wasn't a high priority.
Whatever his reasons, I have to admit I think it looks far more stylish with this cabinet, and a lot of love & craftsmanship went into making it.
I inspected about 50 phonographs that were in the Wilmoth collection. To my surprise, most of them had refinished bed plates and changes which most would not consider doing now. Back when Art collected these machines, they did not have much value and preservation of originality was not a concern at the time. These early collectors just wanted to make them look as nice as possible for display. Also, parts were harder to find because of the lack of other collectors and networking tools like the internet. I found many home made parts on the machines.
A good example was his Class M which is illustrated on page 18 of Frow and Sefl's book "The Edison Cylinder Phonographs 1877-1929". Art fabricated the ear tube rail and had bolted it on the top of the lower bed plate. He drilled the mounting holes thru the lower bedplate. The connection between the ear tube rail and the rubber tubing was made from a "Tiz-It" socket. The lower bed plate was refinished. The upper bed plate was all original and it's serial number was 27!
Art also cast his own upper housings for Model O reproducers. I have one of those Model O's (see pic). You can see that he could not get the Edison lettering to show up good on the mold.
Steve