When you buy a machine, do you expect a horn?
- shopdoc
- Victor O
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- Joined: Wed Nov 18, 2020 3:06 pm
- Personal Text: Edison Specialist
- Location: Verona, NJ
When you buy a machine, do you expect a horn?
Dad's personal collection of gorgeous, high quality Edison cylinder phongraphs is more extensive than family members who are interested.  As I get ready to sell some of the external horn machines, do I want to pair them with the best, largest horns?  Or does it make more financial sense to sell the phonographs and horns separately?
			
			
									
									
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				EKzono
- Victor Jr
- Posts: 39
- Joined: Thu Nov 21, 2024 2:22 pm
Re: When you buy a machine, do you expect a horn?
Sell them with the horn. Most collectors like to keep the orginal machine/horn together.
			
			
									
									
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				JerryVan
- Victor Monarch Special
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Re: When you buy a machine, do you expect a horn?
Totally agree. Wrong or missing horn is a big turn-off. Especially for a disc machine. There can be some variation in horns for cylinder machines, since a lot, (but not all), cylinder machines could be outfitted with a horn of the buyer's choice. Still, if some given horn was known to be paired with a given machine for all its life, it's nice to keep them paired.EKzono wrote: Sun Oct 12, 2025 7:56 am Sell them with the horn. Most collectors like to keep the original machine/horn together.
- Lucius1958
- Victor Monarch
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Re: When you buy a machine, do you expect a horn?
If you display them with the horn, and they're correct or plausible together, you should sell them with the horn.
If the horn & machine are badly mismatched, you could offer the buyer a choice of with or w/o horn.
- Bill
			
			
									
									
						If the horn & machine are badly mismatched, you could offer the buyer a choice of with or w/o horn.
- Bill
- epigramophone
- Victor Monarch Special
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Re: When you buy a machine, do you expect a horn?
I was once involved in clearing a collection whose lately deceased owner stored the horns separately from the machines.
Having reunited each machine with it's horn I had one left over, an 11 Panel Edison Cygnet.
Everything went to auction and sold well, but months later his widow contacted me to say that she had found several more machines carefully hidden away. One was an Edison Triumph minus it's Cygnet horn.......... .
 .
I know of another collector who stored soundboxes separately from their machines, also causing confusion after his death.
Keeping everything together makes life easier for those who have to deal with your collection "After you've gone".
			
			
									
									
						Having reunited each machine with it's horn I had one left over, an 11 Panel Edison Cygnet.
Everything went to auction and sold well, but months later his widow contacted me to say that she had found several more machines carefully hidden away. One was an Edison Triumph minus it's Cygnet horn..........
 .
 .I know of another collector who stored soundboxes separately from their machines, also causing confusion after his death.
Keeping everything together makes life easier for those who have to deal with your collection "After you've gone".
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