Dwight

It looks like typical Victor floor stander coffin style top and record storage underneath behind two doors and the horn volume doors work like louvers not a bad looking machine but nothing super striking but could be a nice looking machine all done up. I could see the louvers would less cumbersome than 2 doors and not get in the way The cabinet is solid and tight as well as the veneer. I probably would impulsed bought it for the price she offered to me at but the tone arm put me off till I got more info and the fact my wife would have not been happy unless she knew about it first so we will see more records or another machine decisions decisionsDe Soto Frank wrote:I am not sure exactly what the E-2 Columbia looks like, but I have accumulated to nice Columbia uprights recently, one for $175, and one with a much shabbier finish and missing its tone-arm, base, and reproducer for $65. A forum member supplied the missing parts for the cost of shipping.![]()
The cabinets are decently constructed (at least as good as Edison's), and the motors are pretty reliable, though not quite is over-built as Victor or Brunswick. The biggest issue I've found with Grafonola motors is that the governor weights were cast from some sort of lead alloy, and are frequently found to be swelling and sloughing-off bits of oxidized metal.
If the machine is "all there" ( not missing any parts ), and the cabinet is sound ( glue joints are tight, veneer is tight / not gouged / bubbling loose ), then $100 isn't bad at all.
After years of ignoring Columbia machines (partially because I rarely encountered them), I decided that I was a little weary of Edison and Victor products, and I wanted to wary my collecting a bit.