Today I compared two Exhibitions, both which came with VV-IVs I’m currently restoring. One repro is serial #47,443A (on machine #24,682-A) and the other is #613,152N (on machine #398,490). If they’re both original to their machines, they were made during/before 1912 and 1918, respectively. So let’s call them “older” and “newer” for clarity’s sake.
They are in similar condition and both have been “semi-restored” (by the same guy) with new gaskets and back flanges, but everything else seemingly original. The sound difference between them is striking. The older one has perhaps the best sound I’ve heard from an Exhibition – full and fairly warm (not harsh or brittle) and reproduces midrange instruments like clarinet, sax, and voice in a fairly life-like manner. The other (newer) one is much quieter and quite brittle sounding, missing the warm midrange of the older one. (I tested both on the same machine, same record, same needle.)
One obvious difference is the size of the flanges (see pics). The newer one is quite a bit deeper, and the whole reproducer is thicker than the older one when compared side-by-side. (In all pics, the older is on the left and the newer is on the right.)
SO… is the sound difference primarily due to the flange difference? And can I put the flange type of the older one on the newer repro, or will it not fit? Do some manufacturers make better sounding flanges than others?
Or should I start by adjusting the tension of the flange screws (the newer ones seem tighter than the older) followed by maybe adjusting the tension of the needle bar screws, in an effort to make the newer sound like the older?
(I’m not touching the older one, btw. I love the way it sounds as is. I’m going to use it as the standard to try and bring the others up to, once I get a better handle on how to “tune” the Exhibition reproducer.)
So please, let fly with your tuning tips! And thanks in advance!
Mark