This was up a few months ago and officially sold for €1.50. Apparently the seller bought it back himself and did not bother to take a new photo. Anyway, this is still an outstanding piece of art, anyone?
Anyone know what the description translates into? I'm guessing something like "found while pumping out the septic tank" or "discovered in an abandoned home that burned down 40 years ago". You have to admire the seller for trying.
Hier geht es vermutlich um ein Aufzeichnungs- oder Abspielgerät
möglicherweise Walzen- phonograph ?
jedenfalls ur- alt !
dieser " Überrest " lag ewige Zeiten hinter einem Schuppen , was es genau einmal war , kann ich nicht sagen ist zwar ziemlich hin - aber die Messingzahnräder & die Walze sind gut erkennbar
die Grundplatte scheint aus massuvem Gußeisen/stahl zu sein ist , wie im Bild zu sehen schon ganz schön gealtert
Maße ca .:
Grundplatte - 21 x 15 cm
Walze oben - 13 cm lang , Ø 5 cm
Federrad unten - 3 cm dick , Ø 7 cm
. . . das Ganze ist total schwer ! ! !
and in English
There is probably a recording or player instrument, possibly a cylinder phonograph
Either way, its very old
this "remnant" has lain for a long time behind a shed, and what exactly it was once, I can not say.
Although quite destroyed - the brass gears and the roller are easily recognizable
the base plate seems to be of solid cast iron / steel, and as seen in the photo quite nicely aged
Dimensions approx.:
Base plate - 21 x 15 cm
Roll - 13 cm long, Ø 5 cm
Spring housing - 3 cm thick, Ø 7 cm
. . . the whole thing is quite heavy! ! !
Last edited by Sidewinder on Sat Mar 20, 2010 4:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
This " takes the cake" but it rang a bell with me and I dug through my old copies of the Hillandale News ( City of London Phonograph and Gramophone Society journal) and in the December 1977 issue a collector named Mark Field wrote and article called From Scrap to Fireside. He bought the bedplate and not much else for two pounds from a scrap metal dealer and proceeded to restore the machine to its former glory.You can see the process in the illustrations. The rigamarole he went through to get the gears to run smoothly would curl one's hair. He is a machinist, of course, but even so! And the re-enameling process was like a spiritual exercise.
So there really are no completely lost causes. Sort of.