larryh wrote:Boy I hope it remains true your new found interest. I used to think I wanted some of those way back, but after listening to a few and buying some records I could only stand so much "tinkling" music. A few disc and they all sounded alike to me at least. Yet I knew people that had huge collection of them and loved them. Even with burn out I will take my records as the path to listening enjoyment seems so much wider there.
I am not knocking your personal choice here, just relating my experiences and thoughts
When I first started collecting early domestic technology and vintage communications / entertainment items, I also wanted a music box, automaton, cylinder phonograph, valve bakelite radio, bakelite Art Deco style telephone, early TV, record auto-changer etc.
I bought some early radios and telephones and a music box around the $700 mark. I also had a Pathé cylinder machine for a time. I agree with Larry though; there was only so much 'tinkling' I could stand from that music box and after a while my interest focused purely on disc phonos (or gramophones as we call them). I sold the music box for a loss and ditched most of the telephones and radios with it. I now have just one valve radio (1950's Bush DAC90), 3 of the more iconic British vintage phones and that's about it. I sold an RGD radio-gram, which although it had a sterling auto-change mechanism, was a very big lump of furniture that I didn't really have room for. I also found that old electrical equipment gives off an unpleasant odour after being in use for a while! It's a pity really it was really attractive and I only paid £1 for it at auction. I think it went to landfill, sadly!

The phonograph was sold on eventually to an uncle of mine.
Similar to Larry, I find that the experience of listening to mechanically and acoustically reproduced music, overall, is far more satisfying than any of these other subjects and this is why I focused more on this area at the expense of everything else. I can't see the appeal of vintage telephones anymore apart from the visual aspects. Who uses them today? I tried for a while with my candle stick phone but I got tired of callers complaining that I sounded 'quiet'
Our vintage radios now over here can hardly pick up any stations anyway, unless, of course, you pay to get them adapted. This is my own bugbear with any collectible today. If it has to be adapted substantially to be able to use it as it was originally intended, then, for me at least, it's a no no and I won't bother with it.
It's a good job we're all different.