Any ideas on how I can prevent the collar of the speed-adjustment lever from slipping on the shaft?
This is for a circa 1945-47 grammophone. I usually don't even look at ones from this era, but this one's in showroom condition, the only one I've seen looking & sounding this good, and totally quiet motor. Gonna clean it up, enjoy test-playing it, then pass it along on the 'bay, to help make this hobby pay for itself.


The speed adjustment lever had obviously been slipping when I got it: The lever was all the way on "Slow", but it was running about 90 RPM. I re-calibrated, but I don't know how to prevent it from slipping again. The tensioning spring that provides friction on the speed control shaft is quite tight, so it requires good torque to turn it.
I've seen this problem on many other earlier models too. Ideally, I wish I had a spiked thin steel strip, with spikes on both sides, to put between the collar and shaft before tightening, to dig into the metal to prevent slipping, like a lock-washer.
Ideas on how to prevent slipping? It currently DOESN'T slip. Maybe it's fine, but I want to be more sure. I already THOROUGHLY degreased. I considered a folded piece of sandpaper, but realized it'd just rip the granules off the paper, and let grit into the motor. If I had a big fancy metal-rated high-speed drill, I'd drill and install a pin. Wish I had some fancy tool to score both metal surfaces, like fine interlocking "teeth"... Other ideas?
Thanks,
- Bob