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Old 04-01-2014, 06:41 PM
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radiotvnut radiotvnut is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Meridian, MS
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Newcomb R-12 classroom record player from '56

Here's a Newcomb R-12 classroom record player that I believe is from '56. It was an ebay purchase that was SUPPOSED to be working good and I paid a little more for these than I normally do, because these older burgundy cased Newcomb players are getting harder to find (these were probably all replaced 30-40 years ago; so, that's why not many are seen today). In fact, I see very few tube classroom record players on ebay anymore. A few years ago, they were all over the place. The most common school RP finds are the solid state Califone's from the '70's+. It's also getting to the point where people are asking stupid prices for these things.

I bought this from someone with only 4 feedback points (all from sellers) and this thing was packed very poorly. He did lock the tonearm; but, that's about all he did right. The record player was placed upside down in the box with zero packing material in the bottom of the box. For the sides, he used a couple of thin layers of bubblewrap. To take up the space in the top, he used what looks like some sort of basket weaving. The platter retainer clip was missing; so, the platter was flopping around inside the record player. When I fired it up, I had no sound and when I opened it, I discovered that the speaker wires were disconnected and the tubes were about to fall out of their sockets. Correcting these faults didn't help; so, either something was damaged in shipment or he was one of those sellers that considered "needle talk and platter rotation" as "working."

This unit uses a 3-tube amp (6V6 output) and a Shure ceramic cartridge (I'll probably replace the cartridge with a stereo cartridge). I'm not too carzy about the drive system in this vintage of record player because that's more rubber that has to be rebuilt. Fortunately, the case is in decent cosmetic shape. There are two Cornell-Doublier ceramic cased "Budroc" capacitors in the amp. The rest are disc capacitors.





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