I thought the "Mch" abbreviation for "Machine" on these tags was the #1 sign of a repro tag- is that not correct?Johnny Smoke wrote:Or a repro?
Could this be the elusive 1st Victor I tag...?
- gramophone-georg
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Re: Could this be the elusive 1st Victor I tag...?
"He who dies with the most shellac wins"- some nutty record geek
I got PTSD from Peter F's avatar
I got PTSD from Peter F's avatar
- phonogfp
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Re: Could this be the elusive 1st Victor I tag...?
Gosh, if that's true, all of mine are repros!gramophone-georg wrote:I thought the "Mch" abbreviation for "Machine" on these tags was the #1 sign of a repro tag- is that not correct?Johnny Smoke wrote:Or a repro?
Just to be clear, the "Mch" abbreviation is most definitely correct for originals.
George P.
- gramophone-georg
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Re: Could this be the elusive 1st Victor I tag...?
phonogfp wrote:Gosh, if that's true, all of mine are repros!gramophone-georg wrote:I thought the "Mch" abbreviation for "Machine" on these tags was the #1 sign of a repro tag- is that not correct?Johnny Smoke wrote:Or a repro?![]()
Just to be clear, the "Mch" abbreviation is most definitely correct for originals.![]()
George P.
Well, I was just going by the info here:
http://www.victor-victrola.com/Started2.htm
Is this not correct, then?
"Nipper on Steroids: On the left is an example of a Chinese "Rip-Off" Victor Dataplate. There are many different styles of these reproductions, and none of them have high-quality graphics. Note the abbreviation of "Machine" as "Mch" (not a common usage in the USA)."
"He who dies with the most shellac wins"- some nutty record geek
I got PTSD from Peter F's avatar
I got PTSD from Peter F's avatar
- phonogfp
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Re: Could this be the elusive 1st Victor I tag...?
You have referenced a well-respected website, but anyone can occasionally make a mistake.gramophone-georg wrote:
Well, I was just going by the info here:
http://www.victor-victrola.com/Started2.htm
Is this not correct, then?
"Nipper on Steroids: On the left is an example of a Chinese "Rip-Off" Victor Dataplate. There are many different styles of these reproductions, and none of them have high-quality graphics. Note the abbreviation of "Machine" as "Mch" (not a common usage in the USA)."
I'm not particularly interested in Victors, but I have a "I" I've owned since 1972, a "II" I've owned since 1974, and a "III" I've owned since 2001 (but first saw in 1970). All three of these came out of houses, and all three have the abbreviated "Mch"on their data plates. There's also a Victrola "XII" here with the same abbreviation. I suppose I could simply be beating the odds, but I'd be willing to bet that the abbreviation is not unusual in the pre-1910 period in the USA...
George P.
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Re: Could this be the elusive 1st Victor I tag...?
Very interesting what Paul Edie had to say about the repro verses original ID tag. It very well could be a misprint missed in proof reading.phonogfp wrote:You have referenced a well-respected website, but anyone can occasionally make a mistake.gramophone-georg wrote:
Well, I was just going by the info here:
http://www.victor-victrola.com/Started2.htm
Is this not correct, then?
"Nipper on Steroids: On the left is an example of a Chinese "Rip-Off" Victor Dataplate. There are many different styles of these reproductions, and none of them have high-quality graphics. Note the abbreviation of "Machine" as "Mch" (not a common usage in the USA)."To be fair, Mr. Edie writes that it's "...not a common usage in the USA," implying that they do turn up sometimes.
I'm not particularly interested in Victors, but I have a "I" I've owned since 1972, a "II" I've owned since 1974, and a "III" I've owned since 2001 (but first saw in 1970). All three of these came out of houses, and all three have the abbreviated "Mch"on their data plates. There's also a Victrola "XII" here with the same abbreviation. I suppose I could simply be beating the odds, but I'd be willing to bet that the abbreviation is not unusual in the pre-1910 period in the USA...![]()
George P.
Without a doubt the Victor I ID tag this thread is about is an original tag. And ( as George said) I would guess most if not all ID tags before 1909 or 1910 use the Mch (machine) abbreviation. Out of curiosity I started looking at my Victor tags, I stopped counting at 8, they all used Mch abbreviation. Probably a better way to tell a repro tag from an original tag would be the Nipper on steroids as Paul Edie points out.
Best Regards, Larry
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victorIIvictor
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Re: Could this be the elusive 1st Victor I tag...?
George P wrote, " To be fair, Mr. Edie writes that it's '...not a common usage in the USA,' implying that they do turn up sometimes."
Indeed, near the bottom of that very webpage, Mr. Edie shows a dealer decal, Stanley & Pearsall, on what he asserts his an authentic VTM product. Above that is the machine's data plate, which reads "Victor Talking Mch. Co."
Best wishes, Mark
Indeed, near the bottom of that very webpage, Mr. Edie shows a dealer decal, Stanley & Pearsall, on what he asserts his an authentic VTM product. Above that is the machine's data plate, which reads "Victor Talking Mch. Co."
Best wishes, Mark
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Re: Could this be the elusive 1st Victor I tag...?
Nipper on steroids refers to the image of Nipper used on the Chinese fakes. Just like some of the Chinese plastic Nippers that are grossly out of proportion, this tag image looks like a bloated, lumpy, poorly executed graphic.
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"The phonograph is not of any commercial value."
Thomas Alva Edison - Comment to his assistant, Samuel Insull.
"No one needs a Victrola XX, a Perfected Graphophone Type G, or whatever you call those noisy things."
My Wife
Thomas Alva Edison - Comment to his assistant, Samuel Insull.
"No one needs a Victrola XX, a Perfected Graphophone Type G, or whatever you call those noisy things."
My Wife
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Re: Could this be the elusive 1st Victor I tag...?
MCH is legit on the early data plates. I have a P1, P3, M, early Vic 1, VV-XII and a VTLA, all with the Mch abbreviation...as well as data plates for another VTLA, an early 6 that are the same. I think Mch appears on all the data plates with the frilly script, because I have a couple of data plates for table top XIs that have the straight script with Machine written out, as well as an dataplate for an l-door XVI also with straight script and written out machine.
Stick to looking at Nipper to figure if it's legit or not.
Stick to looking at Nipper to figure if it's legit or not.