"Londonderry Air / Shoo-Shoo Baby / The Way You Look Tonight" - Glenn Miller; 1954 RCA 45-EY-2
Автор: vintageaudiobuff
Загружено: 2010-01-17
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This record is from the 45 rpm record album titled: "Glenn Miller - Army Air Force Band" (which contains 15 records). The sessions were recorded during the NBC Radio series "I Sustain The Wings", which was broadcast from 1943 until 1944 (some recordings were made from the broadcasts and some from the rehearsal sessions). This record, "Londonderry Air / Shoo-Shoo Baby / The Way You Look Tonight" is from side 29 of the record set. The record album itself was released by RCA records in 1955.
RCA publicly released the 45 rpm phonograph and record in 1949 (RCA made reference to the project as "Madame X" during its development). The RCA Victor phonograph Model 45-EY-2 shown here, began production in 1950 and continued through 1954. It underwent a minor facelift in 1955 with the model number changed to Model 6-EY-1.
I found this little 45-EY-2 RCA Victor phonograph in an antique store in Trussville, AL ready for a full rebuild and restoration. I connectorized the chassis so that all the wires can be easily disconnected whenever the chassis is serviced; I replaced all 3 tubes in the 50 watt amplifier, replaced all capacitors and several resistors; I stabilized the fragile 3 x 5 paper cone speaker with a water based poly-acrylic spray, replaced all rubber idler wheels (deteriorated, which is pretty normal for the rubber in a phonograph of this vintage); disassembled the motor, cleaned, relubricated and installed new rubber motor mounts; disassembled the chassis & changer, cleaned and relubricated & adjusted the changer; installed new wiring for the tonearm; and replaced the original salt-crystal Astatic cartridge with a light tracking Cec-Chuo-Denshi stereo ceramic cartridge (wired for mono) from Willie Bosco (uses a .7 ml diamond needle and custom aluminum cradle).
The cabinet and the platter table have both been stripped and refinished. The platter table also has about 6 coats of clear gloss lacquer on it over new paint which matches the original color. The Bakelite case had a corner missing, with the 4 cracked corner pieces to it rattling around inside the cabinet. I was fortunate to piece the corner back together using mini steel dowels, steel filled epoxy, body filler and glaze, with the final filler & finish wet sanded using 1000 grit paper. Dark brown lacquer was applied to the cabinet as a base coat, walnut tinted translucent toning lacquer was then applied and about 12 coats of clear gloss lacquer (wet sanded between coats), then polished and waxed. All other plastic on the phonograph was also cleaned, polished and waxed.
Enjoy!
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