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Vintage Phones

PADDY

I'll Lock Up
Bartender
Messages
7,425
Location
METROPOLIS OF EUROPA
Ringing in yesteryear with this Bakelite Beauty...

Working as perfectly today as it did when born in 1938..!

d626_1.jpg

d6a2_1.jpg


This one is 1930's too (European).

vintagephone.jpg
 

zaika

One Too Many
Messages
1,480
Location
Portlandia
since i just want a phone that is authentic and works, i found a peddler on Ruby Lane who sells phones that he's polished up and fixed to work and be compatible with modern jacks. His phones cost between $150-250 on average. do you think that's a reasonable price?

i'm looking to switch from using my cell as my primary phone to a land line and i might as well go all the way! ;)
 

Flivver

Practically Family
Messages
821
Location
New England
zaika said:
since i just want a phone that is authentic and works, i found a peddler on Ruby Lane who sells phones that he's polished up and fixed to work and be compatible with modern jacks. His phones cost between $150-250 on average. do you think that's a reasonable price?

i'm looking to switch from using my cell as my primary phone to a land line and i might as well go all the way! ;)

A Western Electric 302 might be a good choice for you since it is the first WE phone that doesn't need a ringer box. And it was designed by noted industrial designer Henry Dreyfuss.

Around here, you can pick up a decent 302 at the flea markets for $25 or less. The phone guys on the internet generally charge about $150 for restored versions of these, but if you're willing to do some cleaning and touching-up yourself, you can save quite a bit of money.

A good reference on the 302 with pictures can be found here:

http://www.telephonearchive.com/phones/we/we302.html
 

zaika

One Too Many
Messages
1,480
Location
Portlandia
Flivver said:
A Western Electric 302 might be a good choice for you since it is the first WE phone that doesn't need a ringer box. And it was designed by noted industrial designer Henry Dreyfuss.

Around here, you can pick up a decent 302 at the flea markets for $25 or less. The phone guys on the internet generally charge about $150 for restored versions of these, but if you're willing to do some cleaning and touching-up yourself, you can save quite a bit of money.

A good reference on the 302 with pictures can be found here:

http://www.telephonearchive.com/phones/we/we302.html

great advice, flivver! thank you! are these phones fairly easy to fit with a modern jack? i mean, for someone like me who doesn't know the first thing about how to do it...if it means being able to save $125 to have a working phone, then i'll do it!
 

Forgotten Man

One Too Many
Messages
1,944
Location
City Dump 32 E. River Sutton Place.
zaika said:
great advice, flivver! thank you! are these phones fairly easy to fit with a modern jack? i mean, for someone like me who doesn't know the first thing about how to do it...if it means being able to save $125 to have a working phone, then i'll do it!

Well, most refurbished phones you'll find today have new cloth cords that look like the old type but, have a modern plug that fits right into the modern phone jack. And if you find a phone that has the old four prongs styled plug, you can buy an adapter that will attach to it that will allow you to plug it into a phone jack.

The only thing you can't do with a rotary phone today is handle phone calls that are automated that require hitting number 1,2,3 or more. It's good to have a touch tone phone out of site that you can use in case of this need. I have a touch tone hidden under my endtable that has an answering machine... glad I have it but, my Western Electric 202 and Western Electric 302 are out in view.

My first vintage telephone was my grandmother's Automatic Electric... the case is missin' most of the back and has a good number of cracks... but, it worked still! The bells never did ring however but, I found it in the garage. Then, my friend gave me a Western Electric 302... great phone and a good place to start.
 

Forgotten Man

One Too Many
Messages
1,944
Location
City Dump 32 E. River Sutton Place.
Anthony said:
Found another photo of my candlestick phone...
IMG_0002.jpg
[/IMG]

Say, is that a "bulldog" mouth piece on that W.E.? Looks like it! If ya wanna have the original mouth piece, ya can contact these good folks:

http://www.phonecoinc.com/

They'll have the parts you need if ya should desire the original mouth piece.

Nice phone! I love the Western Electrics the best... and that set up you got with the ringer box is really nice! I can't wait till I get my candlestick!

I know what you mean about using vintage stuff... it really makes the normal task seem more enjoyable! Makes someone kinda feel like your in an old movie! lol

And that's why I stick to the originals... nothin' like the real thing!
 

Flivver

Practically Family
Messages
821
Location
New England
zaika said:
great advice, flivver! thank you! are these phones fairly easy to fit with a modern jack? i mean, for someone like me who doesn't know the first thing about how to do it...if it means being able to save $125 to have a working phone, then i'll do it!

Sometimes the phone you get will still have the original cord on it with three color-coded wires coming out the end. You can buy new plugs and adaptors at Wal-Mart or Home Depot to attach the phone to a modern modular jack. Any of us here would be happy to show you how once you get your phone.
 

zaika

One Too Many
Messages
1,480
Location
Portlandia
forgotten man and flivver - thank you both!

i will definately post again for help. it sounds like adapting it myself would be fairly easy to do...and for a cheaper price, yes please!!

now to wait for payday...:rolleyes: hehe
 

GI Joe

Familiar Face

CaddyKid21

One of the Regulars
Messages
132
Location
New SN: J.J. Gittes
I have a 1920's candlestick telephone, that my dad brought back from Argentina, it looks like this, but ours had brass accents. Suck as the ear piece, as well as the stick. It sure is a nice phone.

WE_50AL_01.jpg
 

PADDY

I'll Lock Up
Bartender
Messages
7,425
Location
METROPOLIS OF EUROPA
Just the facts maam, JUST THE FACTS...

Another photo of the 1930's phone which is currently in the guest room (which as you can see is doubling up as an LAPD office!!;)

WHIPPET009.jpg

vintagephone.jpg
 

MrNewportCustom

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,265
Location
Outer Los Angeles
Funny that this thread was revitalized so recently.

While enjoying a dinner of high stain potentiality with FedoraGent and Magneto this evening, I remembered these pictures I'd taken of six vintage phones (plus a radio and a switchboard) at a Route 66 museum in Barstow (my recent train-spotting trip), and FG all but climbed over the table demanding that I post them. I saved myself by forming a cross with two rib bones and holding them up between us. :)D) Well, he was right about posting them, and I'd intended to post them sooner, but forgot. "The older you get, the more you forget," I always say.

Anyway, here they are. Enjoy.

Zenith Portable Radio.
Rte-66-Zenith-Radio.jpg


Switchboard. Note the candlestick phone to the right.
Rte-66-Operator.jpg


I like that dial.
Rte-66-gold.jpg


"Are You Smiling?"
Rte-66-Smiling.jpg


Rikstelefonen.
Rte-66-Rikstelefonen.jpg


"Emergency Dial 400"
Rte-66-Dial-400.jpg


Is this phone for making crank calls? :D
Rte-66-Crank.jpg


The candlestick that was in the photo of the switchboard.
Rte-66-Candlestick.jpg



Lee
_____________________________

"The number you have dialed . . ."
 

Lillemor

One Too Many
Messages
1,137
Location
Denmark
My husband went about explaining to me that geeky technological difference between vintage dial phones and the ones we have now. Pulse-pause-Pulse and a bunch of blah, blah, blah...So that's why we won't ever have a vintage phone:(

But at least I can drool over this thread.
 

Lucky Strike

A-List Customer
Messages
387
Location
Ultima Thule
MrNewportCustom said:
Funny that this thread was revitalized so recently.

While enjoying a dinner of high stain potentiality with FedoraGent and Magneto this evening, I remembered these pictures I'd taken of six vintage phones (plus a radio and a switchboard) at a Route 66 museum in Barstow (my recent train-spotting trip), and FG all but climbed over the table demanding that I post them.

Rikstelefonen.
Rte-66-Rikstelefonen.jpg

Norwegian! How on earth did that end up there?
 

Josephine

One Too Many
Messages
1,634
Location
Northern Virginia
Lillemor said:
My husband went about explaining to me that geeky technological difference between vintage dial phones and the ones we have now. Pulse-tone-Pulse and a bunch of blah, blah, blah...So that's why we won't ever have a vintage phone:(

But at least I can drool over this thread.

Get just one, for you. Let him have the others. :D
 

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