Hello friends! Welcome to my channel) I love restoring old things, giving them a second life, I also love tinkering. If our interests coincide, then we will be Friends!)
nice restoration! only using felt (green) for platter base is bad idea because it can effect the flawless movement of mechanism and these part need to lubricant time by time. A solid polished wood or plywood would have been a better option. Overall looking good.
@DIDALL love the veneer! Great job! Was this poor thing in a fire? That was a serious amount of damage! What wheel and compound did you use on the hardware please?
I’ve worked with windup phonographs for 65 years You did not show one second of cleaning dried grease out of the mechanism, or oiling bearings. You video is good for making a perfectly functioning 60+ year look more modern. That is not very helpful to most viewers. We would likely work on fixing the mechanical and acoustic function, and the cabinet work would be secondary. That said, the veneer looks great! I’d like it if the deck was a different material from the turntable.
Ich habe ein baugleiches Grammophon und es ist leider von Schimmel befallen gewesen und das Kunstleder ist ranzig. Es funktioniert einwandfrei und ist vollständig. Die Optik meines Gerätes ist allerdings nicht mehr schön. Ich habe schon überlegt es zu restaurieren aber irgendwie nimmt man ihm damit auch ein bisschen Geschichte. Leider kann ich nicht mit Furnier umgehen.
Здравствуйте, хоть и прошло 3 года, но всеже работа отличная, сам до винтика разбираю, отмываю , мажу где надо и сборка. Один вопрос, как и на чем делали шильдик? Можно подробнее?
@@DIDALL looks idendical , have a look on google defdonatlly a clone of a 102 ,Lovley job on your work its very impressive ! I would love to do the same on mine
thank u for this video!! I have one the same (interestingly with similar damage also) am in the process of restoring so really useful as I lost the photos I took where to put everything back together again 🙃
My father cleared out my grandma house while I was at work I said save the gramophone I’ll restore it He put it in the local skip Before he got back to his car a man fished it out At least it found a new life I could not give it!!!
Bhai aap ki shop kanhan par he hama re paas ek record pilayer he uski servis honi he chalte hu e atakta he Jo gramo phone aap ne theek Kiya he kya aesa hame mil sakta he aur kitne ka bhai aapka nambar to baat kar ne me zyada achcha hota aap kament kar dena
This is lovely! It really shows that you don't need to make it look like it did originally for it to look good, I have a 1945 HMV 102 that is very similar, though it's coverings are in perfect condition and I would never dream of re-covering it.
Автор провел большую работу, хотя не было советских патефонов ПТ-3 и оклеенных шпоном и 😊 фетром внутри, не показаны работы по ремонту и настройке двигателя, подшипника тонарма , пружины имембраны , а это крититические места в этом патефоне... Это скорее реконструкция чемодана , а не реставрация самого патефона, хотя выглядит красиво 18:21 18:21
Здравствуйте, подскажите как можно безболезненно располовинить данный двигатель? Не могу снять заднюю половину, крепко держится на коленвалу двумя запресованными подшипниками
1 of the not best restoration work I seen, rusty parts were not even cleaned, surface was not cleaned and most process was hidden...so a big thumb down for wasting our 18 minutes.
Although I can appreciate the technical skills and the ability to take a record player like this apart and then renew it, the only thing I did not really like was the veneer, it somehow makes it look too new. Some of these old record players in my country had real Oregon Pine as a base, and they look really beautiful when the material is removed and the real wood underneath restored. But you have to work with what you have, I understand that
@KING VICTROLA I know. But I would still prefer a natural case such as wood, above a manmade material. Even if the object gets a few dents and scractchmarks with time, it looks nicer and reflects the history of the piece. I have a yellowwood table which I inherited from my parents, and will not dream of putting sandpaper to it, you can see that it has been used and served a purpose, every mark on it was caused by a family member either baking or cutting bread
@@goforgold7082 Many portable gramophones aren't entirely made from timber, the top and bottom are made from a type of fibreboard so the veneer was necessary. Some of the earlier portables had timber cases which do look good. I think the timber cases ended up being considered old fashioned and it became more fashionable to have portables look like leather cases, as well as it being cheaper and a bit lighter to use thin fibreboard. Interestingly, the HMV 102 (which this gramophone is a copy of) and the 101 had for the standard version a beautiful varnished timber motorboard, whereas for the coloured de luxe versions the motorboard was covered in the same Rexine as the rest of the case.
Lovely EMI 102 I have a 1939 model … have cleaned it up a bit but not some much other than mechanically clean it all,down and lubricate the motor and working parts. I wonder why it’s all black, when originally it was blue, has it been in a dirty environment or a fire perhaps, smoke damage?
стоит родной, но переваривал, на видео нет, просто пополам разрезал, и сделал внутрянку нормально. От скутера не знаю , должен подойти. это же двух тактный, ему важен выхлоп, резонанс, все дела.