FOR SALE: Mahogany VV-IX - $195
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- Victor Monarch Special
- Posts: 8716
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- Location: Albany, Oregon
FOR SALE: Mahogany VV-IX - $195
I am happy to deliver this mahogany VV-IX to Union or APS for $195. I don't think shipping is practical. All parts and finish are original. Please PM with any interest or questions. It goes to the first person to say "SOLD!". Photos are with and without flash. Thanks, Jerry
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- Victor V
- Posts: 2708
- Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2011 11:23 pm
- Location: NW Indiana VV-IV;
Re: FOR SAlE: Mahogany VV-IX - $195
Jerry,
I already have one.... but that is a great price for a nice tabletop machine.
Any collectors that do not have one yet, should consider it as they are powerful machines in a small tabletop cabinet, with that classic "Victrola" look.
Good Luck!!!!!
Jerry
I already have one.... but that is a great price for a nice tabletop machine.
Any collectors that do not have one yet, should consider it as they are powerful machines in a small tabletop cabinet, with that classic "Victrola" look.
Good Luck!!!!!
Jerry
- De Soto Frank
- Victor V
- Posts: 2687
- Joined: Wed Dec 01, 2010 1:27 pm
- Location: Northeast Pennsylvania
Re: FOR SALE: Mahogany VV-IX - $195
Very nice machine, Jerry !
This is the Victrola that I grew-up with.
Parents and older brother purchased it and a "matching" record cabinet ( not a "slide-in" ) at an estate sale near Savage Md. in summer 1971.
Ours is slightly earlier, with the "feet", but the "crescent" speed control.
I was only about 4-5 years old at the time; growing-up, I was not allowed to touch the delicate hi-fi or the LP records, but for some unknown reason, I was allowed to play with the VV-IX as much as I wanted to.
The machine is still in the family, although the record cabinet went missing some years ago.
It is indeed a fine-sounding machine and deserves to be any anyone's serious collection.

This is the Victrola that I grew-up with.

Parents and older brother purchased it and a "matching" record cabinet ( not a "slide-in" ) at an estate sale near Savage Md. in summer 1971.
Ours is slightly earlier, with the "feet", but the "crescent" speed control.
I was only about 4-5 years old at the time; growing-up, I was not allowed to touch the delicate hi-fi or the LP records, but for some unknown reason, I was allowed to play with the VV-IX as much as I wanted to.

The machine is still in the family, although the record cabinet went missing some years ago.
It is indeed a fine-sounding machine and deserves to be any anyone's serious collection.

De Soto Frank