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Where To Get Sets and Parts For discussions about swapmeets, rallies, NVCF and BVWS, car boot sales, antique and charity shops, dealers, newspaper adverts, the local tip and just about any other source of equipment (other than eBay). |
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10th Jun 2014, 3:15 pm | #1 |
Retired Dormant Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Westbury, Wiltshire, UK.
Posts: 2,451
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PX4s galore!
Nope this is not a windup.
Today was viewing day at Standerwick auction (off the A36 Wiltshire) and there to my total disbelief were boxes and boxes of PX4's PX25's EL34s , KT66's and a myriad other valves all going as just a few lots. There has obviously been a vintage workshop clear out and there are amplifiers there too. Sales day is tomorrow (Wednesday) and the sale starts at 10am. I have nowhere to put it all so good luck. http://www.cooperandtanner.co.uk/Sale-Rooms.aspx |
11th Jun 2014, 3:22 pm | #2 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire, UK.
Posts: 3,310
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Re: PX4s galore!
Did anyone go?
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"Nothing is as dangerous as being too modern;one is apt to grow old fashioned quite suddenly." |
11th Jun 2014, 3:53 pm | #3 |
Heptode
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Garnant, near Ammanford, South Wales, UK.
Posts: 657
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Re: PX4s galore!
Hi
I managed to get them to send me some pictures and the catalogue, but then could not get anyone to cover me in work Looked a chaotic pile of junk, probably went for £1000s Richard
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BVWS member. |
11th Jun 2014, 4:47 pm | #4 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Oxfordshire, UK.
Posts: 4,311
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Re: PX4s galore!
I went (I've just got back) and I met a few other familiar faces. I also saw quite a few other unfamiliar ones milling around the valves. The lots included a fair few home-brew amps with a fair few PX4s, PX25s and KT66s in. And there were some more of these in boxes. There was also a nice-ish Leak TL/12.1. There were lots of empty valve boxes though, and the stuff did look like it had sat in a garage or a shed for rather a long time. I didn't keep a tally but a single one of the thirteen 'radio' lots, as they were called, went for well over £1,000 and I'd estimate that all thirteen fetched a total of £5,000 or so, mostly paid by people I didn't recognise, some of whom were on phones. I think the 'radio' total might have been comparable with the total for everything else that had sold up to that point (500+ lots). The gasps from the crowd and, frankly, to some extent from the auctioneer, show that most people out there still have no idea at all what the market value of these things is.
Cheers, GJ
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11th Jun 2014, 5:17 pm | #5 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Lynton, N. Devon, UK.
Posts: 7,087
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Re: PX4s galore!
...which might lead the people to think that the unremarkable-looking radio set in their boxroom will earn them a holiday abroad.
At least it could save a few more radios from landfill though. |
11th Jun 2014, 5:32 pm | #6 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Oxfordshire, UK.
Posts: 4,311
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Re: PX4s galore!
Fortunately a rather tired bakelite Cossor Melody Maker, which had been given pride of place on a shelf of its own just inside the door, had sold earlier for not very much. So the more perceptive members of the crowd might have realised there was more to this vintage electronics thing than meets the untrained eye .
Cheers, GJ
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11th Jun 2014, 6:26 pm | #7 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Oxford, UK.
Posts: 17,859
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Re: PX4s galore!
A happy ending then, I suppose. At least they've not been dumped by someone who doesn't know better.
Nick. |
11th Jun 2014, 10:44 pm | #8 |
Moderator
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Fife, Scotland, UK.
Posts: 22,899
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Re: PX4s galore!
So we can just wait and see where they next turn up and for how much...
David
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12th Jul 2014, 2:20 am | #9 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Rugeley, Staffordshire, UK.
Posts: 8,832
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Re: PX4s galore!
Well, I think that's been the case in some quarters for a long time. Many is the time - just out of curiosity - I've gone into a back street junk shop and asked the price of an oblong, louvred, ugly, late 50s 'plastic' cased wireless and been told, "Oh yes, that's a bakelite wireless and it's £80". They soon learn when no-one buys the stuff.
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A digital radio is the latest thing, but a vintage wireless is forever.. |
31st Aug 2014, 3:03 am | #10 |
Heptode
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Olympia, Washington, USA.
Posts: 664
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Re: PX4s galore!
I see you folks have the same problems there as here with "Antique" shops over pricing old radios.
They look in the price guides for "working" status radios that are complete and seemingly add on another 50% for radios beaten, battered, and missing parts and knobs. (Like $95.00 for a what!? A 1960 clock radio with a broken case, missing the volume knob and all of the clock adj. knobs?!) Sadly, here they never seem to learn that they are pricing themselves out of the market. I know of one store with the same radio and price on it for over 10 years now. They won't negotiate down on it either. OTOH, the best score I ever made was a 2nd hand store that had a $20.00 price on a Catalin radio. I had the radio paid for and out of there in a few minutes. ( Yes, Sir, may I please look at that one there? Well OK, I guess it might be one I would like). I was chortling all the way home. (MINE! MINE! All MINE! ) Yes, it was a pretty common one with a chip in the case, but is now "My Precious". The only Catalin I have. |