Re: Best finds of 2021?
Posted: Sun Jan 02, 2022 4:40 pm
I'm supposed to be downsizing my collection(s), not adding to them, but somehow or other I still find some opportunities irresistible. So in 2021 I bought two coin-ops that I definitely didn't need, but you know how that goes.
The first was a BS. I already have one -- the earliest style with no decal and an open-front coin chute. But I couldn't resist going for a banner decal version because it was so special and unusual, if little known -- a "BSP" (as some collectors colloquially call it). When Columbia gave up on their unsuccessful attempt to sell highly-nickeled and polished Eagles in 1899 (BXP), they evidently simply quietly used the leftover unsold stocks of nickeled mechanisms in a few BS coin-ops. Evidently no attempt was made to single them out as special editions, they were just quietly sold off along with ordinary examples. Only a half-dozen are currently known, all with serial numbers in a narrow range. It's a small and obscure point but I love these sorts of arcane details.
The other is a Type N coin-op. I had one in the past but later sold it. It's one of the few things I've sold that later caused seller's remorse, so when a nice example turned up I happily jumped on the chance to get one back into the collection.
I really love how well Columbia coin-ops work. I've had several Edisons, and still have two, but Columbias seem to run more reliably. For many years back in the 70s and 80s I had a BS on the piano in our dining room. The latest BS is back in that place of honor, where I get to enjoy looking at it every evening. And, more often than not, playing it. (Did I mention reliable?)
The first was a BS. I already have one -- the earliest style with no decal and an open-front coin chute. But I couldn't resist going for a banner decal version because it was so special and unusual, if little known -- a "BSP" (as some collectors colloquially call it). When Columbia gave up on their unsuccessful attempt to sell highly-nickeled and polished Eagles in 1899 (BXP), they evidently simply quietly used the leftover unsold stocks of nickeled mechanisms in a few BS coin-ops. Evidently no attempt was made to single them out as special editions, they were just quietly sold off along with ordinary examples. Only a half-dozen are currently known, all with serial numbers in a narrow range. It's a small and obscure point but I love these sorts of arcane details.
The other is a Type N coin-op. I had one in the past but later sold it. It's one of the few things I've sold that later caused seller's remorse, so when a nice example turned up I happily jumped on the chance to get one back into the collection.
I really love how well Columbia coin-ops work. I've had several Edisons, and still have two, but Columbias seem to run more reliably. For many years back in the 70s and 80s I had a BS on the piano in our dining room. The latest BS is back in that place of honor, where I get to enjoy looking at it every evening. And, more often than not, playing it. (Did I mention reliable?)