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There are two schools of thought on boatanchors. I'm in the fix
it and use it school. Me too. That doesn't mean I'll drill holes in an unmodified BA or make irreversible changes, though. There is another school of thought. These are like collectors of antiques. You're not supposed to clean or restore a real antique. The real fanatics prize the patina of age (dirt) on furniture or whatever. Radios owned by these folk are called "shelf queens". They are not repaired except with original parts. Since you can't find a 70 year old capacitor that works, these radios don't work. They sit on the shelf and are display-only. Yep. Sad, really, because a lot of fix-it-and-use-it work can be done so the radio still looks "vintage". For example, a lot of folks clean out the old electrolytics, put modern ones inside the old can and seal it up so that unless you look really closely you'll never know it was redone. Same for wax paper caps. I have another view of antique radios. I believe that the prices are yet to be realized. I saw a "catalin" table radio sell on eBay for over $20,000. These are plastic AM table radios in weird colors. Apparently collectors, whoever they are, are collecting these, for whatever reason. There's a major difference between fixing up something old in order to use it, and collecting "real" antiques. The latter becomes more a matter of "art". For example, look at how some old wines fetch incredible prices. In many cases, the bottles will never be opened - and, in fact, the wine inside is probably vinegar by now. What has happened is that it's no longer really about a beverage - it's about the bottle as a collectible, which means its price has nothing to do with its real worth. Watch the Antique Roadshow. Weird, screwy stuff is priced at incredible numbers. Ugly furniture, carvings, ceramics, paintings, books, most things I'd say, "what would I do with that?" Incredible numbers like $10,000, $25,000, $80,000. That's because the experts know that someone out there will pay those prices. In many cases, rarity alone is the driving force. There's also age, condition, and somewhere in there is the actual craftsmanship. One of my favorite AR stories is the one where two ladies (sisters) brought in a nice table lamp with a Tiffany-type shade. They said a local antique dealer had said it wasn't a genuine Tiffany (because the base was metal, not wood), and was worth maybe $100. The expert said it was indeed genuine, and was one of a very few made about 1904. Only about six examples were known to survive, and none were as good as the two ladies'. They had been using it as a table lamp in the living room, and it had Kmart bulbs in it. Worked, too. They had brought it to the show in a cardboard box, in the back of the minivan. Expert priced it at about $120,000. Their *house* wasn't worth $120,000. Then I look at my Signal/One CX7A, one of less that 1,000. Incredible engineering, Nixie tubes. I think that in the near future, boatanchor radios will be highly prized collectables. It might not happen for 20 years, it might be starting now. I wouldn't count on it. Too far off the beaten path of the antique/collectible world. Then again, a few years ago, somebody paid $5100 for an unbuilt AT-1 kit. That's not a typo - five thousand one hundred US dollars. I hate to say it but the people who are preserving "shelf queens" will probably see the highest valuations. Sad but true. Anyhting not "original" will devalue. Whether it actually works is immaterial. I'm definitely not in that school. Nor I. About 15 years back I came across a partially-built HW-101 kit (the builder had only done the VFO). Also an unbuilt HP-23. Like a dummy I bought the pair for $150 and built them. I don't want to know what the unbuilt kit would be worth today. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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