Kirtley, you have an old head on young shoulders! You have certainly hit the nail squarely on the head here. That is also my view entirely. RESTORED items should look exactly like they were when new. However machines should not be restored unless it is absolutely necessary. I also agree with need4art in as much as I also don't want to live with a pile of rusty dirty scratched and dented machines with scabby looking horns where most of the paint is peeling off. There is a balance to be struck and most collectors I've met tend to be if anything slightly over cautious about undertaking restoration.my opinion is that resoration should make something old the condition it was when it was new, that is ok to me, when people turn a machine into something that it never was, thats where it turns bad.
if a machine is restored back to its "new" condition and it is done well, i dont really have a problem, if someone does a restoration badly or does too much, then i consider it ruined!
thats just my opinion though!
However there isn't much excuse for leaving machines unpolished, unloved and uncared for. There is no great honour in owning dirty machines that "no one has ever touched from new". There is usually a good reason for this: the machine became obsolete very quickly and was discarded to the attic or worse! That is why it is untouched. That and the fact that a lot of people just can't be bothered to clean anything. Why would a collector who presumably bought the item out of choice with their hard earned wish to continue with this bizarre curatorial stance? There is nothing wrong with getting out metal polish and shining up parts that were intended to shine or polishing up and waxing cabinets. Who really takes pride in the ownership of grot?
It amuses me when the words "fully restored" are mentioned by a few dealers we have over here. What THEY usually mean by this is that the motor has been cleaned and the soundbox gaskets replaced.That is NOT restoration, that is simply servicing and maintenance!