As per suggestion in the Yankee Trader board, I have posted
some scans of the phonograph ads to aid in identification
purposes.
1908 Sears Catalogue Scans
- antique1973
- Victor IV
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- alang
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Re: 1908 Sears Catalogue Scans
Thank you very much!
Andreas
Andreas
- Covah
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Re: 1908 Sears Catalogue Scans
Cool!
Last edited by Covah on Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- Victor IV
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Re: 1908 Sears Catalogue Scans
Got a question for you wise folks: what are Columbia P cylinders that they are selling with the cheap machine? They have to be hard wax moulded, don't they??
Inquiring minds want to know......
Jim
Inquiring minds want to know......
Jim
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- Victor VI
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Re: 1908 Sears Catalogue Scans
P cylinders were standard size wax cylinders (brown wax?), & XP are standard Gold Moulded cylinders.
G cylinders are Grand cylinders, and C cylinders were 6" long for use with office machines (C, CE & CI).
I'm not sure what letter designation they gave to pre-recorded 20th century cylinders though.
G cylinders are Grand cylinders, and C cylinders were 6" long for use with office machines (C, CE & CI).
I'm not sure what letter designation they gave to pre-recorded 20th century cylinders though.
- phonogfp
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Re: 1908 Sears Catalogue Scans
The Twentieth Century 6" cylinders used the same nomenclature as the first Graphophone designed to play them - - BC. Kind of odd.gramophoneshane wrote: I'm not sure what letter designation they gave to pre-recorded 20th century cylinders though.
George P.
- MTPhono
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Re: 1908 Sears Catalogue Scans
Any of you guys seen a Thompson Modifier? It's got to be pretty rare.
I wonder if it is a volume control or one of the many gimicks offered to "improve" the sound.
I wonder if it is a volume control or one of the many gimicks offered to "improve" the sound.
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Re: 1908 Sears Catalogue Scans
I would think that any pre-recorded cylinders sold in 1908 would be moulded records of the hard black wax variety. Jerry Blais
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- Victor VI
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Re: 1908 Sears Catalogue Scans
You would think so, although maybe it was a way to dispose of obsolete stock?Jerry B. wrote:I would think that any pre-recorded cylinders sold in 1908 would be moulded records of the hard black wax variety. Jerry Blais
They were both still offered in the 1906 UK catalogue, with the "P" at 10d (10 pennies), and the "XP" at 1/- (12 pennies), even though the catalogue states that Columbia were the originators of Gold Moulded cylinders (1901-02?), so perhaps both types were being offered until the companies cylinder production ceased?
- phonogfp
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Re: 1908 Sears Catalogue Scans
I love phonograph gadgets, and the Thompson Modifier is near the top of my "Look For" list. I've never sencountered one, but they were heavily advertised in the Talking Machine World. I suspect the lower end of the gadget is rubber, which may account for why I've never seen one.MTPhono wrote:Any of you guys seen a Thompson Modifier? It's got to be pretty rare.
I wonder if it is a volume control or one of the many gimicks offered to "improve" the sound.
It functions as both a volume control and claimed improvements to the sound. You can read it all in the Sears blurb above.
George P.