by Joe_DS »
Tue Oct 23, 2007 4:44 pm
shane wrote:I didn't know Victor made any metal re-entrant horns! Would that be about the same size as a Credenza horn, and if so, is there much difference between the metal and wooden horn sound quality? I think the 10-50 horn comes in at 7' long.
Metal re-entrant horns--all the same style--were installed in a few late-series Orthophonic Victrolas starting around 1928: the VV-8-35, which replaced the Credenza, the 8-8/8-9 (mentioned above) and the 10-35 and 11-25 (both equipped with automatic changers). Some of these models are listed on this page --
http://victor-victrola.com/new_page_2.htm While measuring about six feet in length, the metal horn's mouth was more square in shape, and slightly smaller than the wooden six foot horn.
The most commonly found model equipped with the metal horn is the 8-35.
Based on what I've listened to--when using medium or loud tone steel needles--the 8-35 is louder than a well-restored Credenza, and the upper range is "crisper," but the metal horn's sound quality is also less directional. In contrast, the Credenza's upper range is more mellow, the midrange is somewhat richer, and bass--especially--is more forceful. Simply put, the Credenza sounds more like an electrically amplified phonograph. (The 10-50, which of course used the largest commercially produced wooden folded horn that Victor made, is in a class by itself. The mouth of the 10-50's horn is larger than the Credenza's, it's bass is significantly deeper, and overall, the sound quality is more "concert hall-like.")
I should add that three models were equipped with small (non-folded) metal horns -- the VV-2-35 and VV-2-55 portables (both of which weighed about 25 pounds, without records!), and the radio-Victrola model VV-7-11. That was truly an odd bird, since it contained an electric radio with it's own small loudspeaker, along with an acoustic (hand-cranked or electric motor option) Orthophonic Victrola. The Victrola portion was housed in a boxy structure above the radio. Basically, what Victor did was to install the same metal horn/motor-board used on the portables inside of the cabinet. The back of the boxy cabinet was fitted with a curved reflecting pannel to project the sound waves outward to the front of the cabinet, through the opened front doors.
SEE:
http://victor-victrola.com/7-11.htmALSO:
http://www.phonoland.com/archives/mboar ... 5568.shtml