@@CleveIndians I was a repairman in Canada you dolt! Who the hell do you think you are! All I said was that I found the video interesting. And I'm not your pal!
I remember my Grandma having a phone similar to this model when I was as young as 4 years old. Im 59 now. So that would have been around 1967. Hudson Kansas kept using them into the 1960's and early 1970's when I was still a child. I had to stand on a kitchen chair in the livingroom to reach near the mouth piece. LOL Hudson only had a population of a few hundred people. The town is still active today with the flour mill and one cafe being the only businesses left. I remember talking to my Mother on this type of phone when I'd stay at my Grandmother's home in Hudson. They worked just fine to a child back then. I really enjoyed watching your video upload. It brought back lots of great memories. Thank you very much! 🤗
Oh all the conversations that have been spoken through this marvel. I wonder the same about my own antique telephone sometimes, but that one is not nearly that old, only about 50
I'm 72, from Ohio USA. My dad was the only lineman during WWII in a large, rural area. He bright all kinds of old and interesting items home to play with. We had 2 old crank phones, and a couple Frankenstein. Thanks for the memories!!
I like projects like these, it really puts how far technology has advanced into perspective. Beautiful restoration. I must admit that I'm impressed you found one of these phones with nearly all the original parts.
did you restore it to working order or just to be a decoration on the wall @@BGRestore, though I suppose with our modern ech it wouldn't be compatible anymore..
While the manufacturing processes have been hugely refined over the decades, it's pretty amazing to me that the fundamental technology, and its interfaces, remain compatible for 120 years. Also, can you envision the survival, and functioning, of your iPhone until 2140?
I just discovered your video on this restoration and then watched the video of the typewriter. I don't know which is more amazing. Great job and heartwarming to see old technology brought back to life. God Bless what you do!
Beautiful work. My grandparents had one until it was smashed to bits by a lightning storm one afternoon. Exploded it all over the room (1948). 30 years later I build a replica, after finding a pair of the bells. I still have it as a door bell in my front hallway. Thank you for the video.
I started working For Western electric in 1966 we fixed up quarterfew of these, It took me many years to find a Western electric Wall phone in an old barn , And a candlestick with a subset in a falling down shed, Love your work waiting for more, Take care!!!
I loved that this type of phone is still around, even if they are not currently connected. I have only seen these in black and white movies, never seen one in my life. Who knows someday, we may be needing these again, and it's great to know there are people out there that knows how they work, like B&G Restore. Great Video.
I remember as a kid when my uncle found a magneto similar to this one in a scrapyard and brought it home. We attached two wires and some brass tubing to it and used it to drive earthworms up for fishing bait. LOL Good memories and a great restoration job.
Totally enjoyable! I just wish you had one or two others so they could be connected and function. Nice videography, great detail and pacing. Thanks so much for posting this!
I remember using one of these until I was a teenage. Mind you, it was only connected to the neighbors farm that was located 1/4 mile away. It was a great aunt. She alwayed picked up, and it was fascinating to us as kids. I'm 63 yrs. old.
After all this time, we still associate phone signal strength with the number of bars we have as a holdover from when this phone was introduced. Thank y'all for such an amazing video and especially the restoration of a piece of history. What is funny to me is that my grandmother still used her phone when I was a kid (70s). Operators and designations (instead of area codes) were disappearing in our area when I was a kid. Wow... Times have changed more than I thought, looking back.
That telephone takes me back a few decades. My Great-grandfather, in the mid-1960's, still had one of those in his little country store (very rural NC). How rural? Wood stove for heating, oil lamps for lighting. Thanks for the fond memories of days gone by. Nicely done restoration. I just found your channel as this was a recommended video for YT. 🙂
Was it one of those stores where people would come in and tell the clerk what they wanted, and the clerk would go in the back and get everything for the customer?
@Dangerous Moonwalker Of what I first didn't know about David Graue is that: he was a Flat Rock North Carolina resident. Regarding what was first unknown to me. It's just that I've already looked at and read, most of his early black and white comic strip series. Most of his early works were created during the entire 1970s. It's this era in particular. ⚫️ 🐈⬛️ ◼️ ⬛️ ♟️ ▪️ ⚫️ 😳
I just purchased two antique Kellogg telephones, one is from 1892, and just arrived! I am wanting to restore it, but it’s in pretty rough shape! I am glad you went into detail on the magneto, as mine is very difficult to turn, I also think from looking it over it’s had some clumsy repair work in the past! The wiring looks rough, but your video gave me confidence!
Wow, it was like a science class watching you revisit a bygone era. I was fascinated from start to finish. I congratulate you and thank you for sharing with us your passion and your love to perpetuate the beauties of the past. You have caught a new subscriber.
Wow so cool!!!!!!! I love old technology! I actually have an old millimeter projector from the 1930's (or older, possibly) and if it ever breaks, I am hiring you 100%!
I'm so blown away by this restoration. I have been so curious about how these worked. Thank you for this video and thank you for sharing such an amazing piece of history with us. I look forward to many more amazing projects you all come up with.
Am I the only one getting anxiety watching him take this apart!? Lol. The amount of knowledge and skill you have is absolutely amazing, these phones are very rare and to restore one to new is amazing
Back when almost everything came in a wood, or metal box! Nowadays, everything is plastic! I remember seeing this type of telephone on Lassie back in the day, although I've never used one. Great restoration!
Truly fascinating... in just 120 years we made a giant jump in telephone development! To imagine that this device was the latest state of technology at that time -- mind- blowing, simply mindblowing...
@@nickr1184 > Even more incredible, indeed; and also the technical development in general -- in the last century we've made more progress than the whole millenium before!
I love my old phones. As long as the elements are working you can hook it to the system and it will work. Well answering anyways. My boys loved answering the phone with mine. I need to get it out and hook it back up. I have a nice little collection and still enjoy using them. Especially my old rotary units. Great video and awesome work.
My great grandparents had a phone like this in their home up until their passing in their 90’s. As far as I know it was still there when the house was sold. Seeing this brought me happy memories of them ❤️
My Great Uncle worked for Stromberg Carlson in Rochester his whole life. My father sold phone service in Iowa for Stromberg Carlson in the early 60's. Excellent work! It is very cool to see a restoration project with a close personal tie. Thank you.
Wow!!! What a transformation. Witnessing your expertise and the intricacies of the reserection these time capsule devices is such a satisfying experience. Thank you so much! ❤❤
My dad bought a brand new Stromberg Carlson stereo sound sistem back in the 1980's. Just by readint the brand of the phone many memories have came back to my mind 😞😞. My dad passed away nine years ago, thanks for making me remember him. Oh, btw, excelent restoration 😊.
Great work! I also was a telephone repair technician back in 1979 for Pacific Telephone & Telegraph. I enjoyed seeing your restoration of the old phone. Tip, Ring & Ground are the 3 wires used on the phone line, I can't forget it....❤
B&G Restore my darlings, it’s incredible to see a telephone from the past. When I was a small child occasionally I saw one of these telephones. The memories that are connected with the phone are stored in my head forever. Thank you for allowing me to remember those days from the past. Take care and stay safe 🌹😇🌈🌞👍🎈🕊🇺🇸❤️🙏
Very impressive restoration. I have done several, neither as in depth as yours. I removed all components and polished then clear coated everything plated and repainted what was black. Then refinished the wood and reassembled. While my restorations looked beautiful, sadly I lost the ring. On one phone I was very pleased to see the internal part of the ear piece date stamped 1909. Very labor intensive job restoring one of these phones, definitely a labor of love, but worth it if you love them!
Nope, but not too long after the 30's. I remember seeing some of these around as well as how Bell Telephone operators had to manually re-route calls, party lines, and rotary phones were the only type available. And of course I remember private companies having their own little switchboards (many made by Western Electric) run by a real-live human being, before today's electronic switches, know as PBX's. Or have we even moved past that now? I retired some years ago and truly don't know anymore. Cell phones may even have made that obsolete..😉😁
Excellent video! Well done on the restoration. I have this same Stromberg-Carlson phone. I’ve connected it to several other antique phones in my house via a line simulator (Teltone TLS-4). My kids love calling this phone from our rotary phone. They get excited every time the bells ring! I hope you’re able to see this phone in action too! Thank you for sharing!
Excellent metal work restoration. I have a 1908 Ericsson "Commonwealth" walnut phone with an ear/mic. handpiece. It was used on our sheep & cattle station until about 1960. Your illustrated data shows the "earth return" system which can be used instead of two wires; as the name implies, the ground makes up half the circuit - in our situation this was for one mile distance to the other homestead on the property. Many find this hard to believe since the two batteries only provide 3 volts but the transformer boosts the 'alternating voice current' enough to overcome the resistance of the earth! Regards.
Very nice restoration. The thing that really stands out is how tight the grain is on the original wood compared to the new wood used for the shelf. It probably would have taken old-growth lumber to even come close.
Personal experience with this phone: When I was a little kid in the 1950's (yes I'm old), my grandmother who lived on a rural route in Pennsylvania had a phone similar to this. It was on a party line. For all you kids out there that means everybody in the area shared one line. If you needed to use the phone and someone was on it you waited or cut in on them asking them to get off. Anybody could listen in on your phone call including the neighborhood gossip. It was like the Twittr of the olden days. To call out you had to crank it and the operator came on and you told her what number to call. Maybe you remember from the Andy Griffin show sheriff Taylor would have to get Sara on the line to dial out. At the end of this video when I saw how much the people had to pay it's no wonder my poor grandparents had kept that phone. Thanks for the memories and you did a great job.
I have one of theese, its sitting on my wall for decoration, it still works mechanically. My father restored it, it was the original phone from his parents first house the built wayyyyy back in the 30s. When he restored it, the phone was not in as bad of shape as the one here, it's a beautiful piece, the coolest thing about the moving parts is the fact they were all hand machined, back when there were no automated cnc milling and lathes. Things were built with skill, pride, and made to last!! Great job!! Love restoration videos, you earned another sub!! Take care!!
I remember seeing a similar style phone that was modified. The area under the shelf was actually boxed in and part of the shelf was hinged allowing the shelf to lift up exposing a DTMF pad and where below was hidden the telephone network allowing the phone to work on modern lines. The magneto had been removed replaced by a false handle that could turn. The area where the magneto and the batteries once were housed was modified by removing the shelf allowing one to store a small personal telephone book. Can you imagine sitting in an old kitchen during a thunder storm and looking up at the phone to catch sparks flying between the lightning arrestor contacts caused by a nearby strike or static buildup. This was an interesting video showing how man used what technology and materials he had available to him to provide a useful tool.
I can tell you as a vampire this was the best time to be kind of alive. You had the ability to call someone halfway across the world, and you weren’t always being watched or listened to. I ate wonderfully back then.
You did a good job. Being a retired repairman I couldn't help but think about all the history was being scratched off. I have an old Kellogg wall phone and I haven't done anything to restore. I've kept it original.
I also picked up a Northern Electric however, I cannot find any numbers so not sure what I’ve got in regards to age. But it is great to watch and has been a tremendous inspiration. Thank you for sharing
Ive been looking for more restoration stuff that wasnt just knives and lighters and this was recommended, great work! Ive subbed and cant wait for more videos!
Excellent work great craftsmanship a man that knows his job doing these phones I love antique phones especially the older ones back in the 1900s but excellent job way to go bro
I have an old crank wall phone that looks like this one. I am sure it's made by a different company though. Was raised by grandparents in an old farm house. Th crank phone was used and was on a 5 party line our ring was two longs and a short. You had to go thru a switchboard with a live operator to call out. After that it was replaced with a heavy black desk rotary phone made out of plastic bakelite (sp?) stuff used back then. My crank bells are the original black and it still rings when you crank it. Wonder what these phones go for now as antiques? Fantastic restoration. Did not realize it had a bazillion parts to it. Sheesh!!
Greetings from Australia Ben and Gwen! I really enjoyed this video and the technicalities of restoring it! I'm in my 70's and grew up on a farm in Australia and we had a perhaps slightly more modern piece of the same phone equipment Made n the 30's and 40's it was made from black material- possibly like a 'bakalight' ? In those days we all rented the phones. To speak on the phone to my grandma I had to stand on a chair or be held up by my mum/dad. Our ph no when I was about 6 was 246! LOL it was screwed into the wall and had the horn shape ear piece and you spoke into the trumpet thing on the wall.You had to wind the handle on the RHS and hold the trumpety earpiece in your left hand. There was an operator who asked your number and the number you were calling etc. I found a very similar one on a website but was unable to post it here. Love your channel- Thanks for the enjoyment! Take care.
This is a video I enjoyed watching so much. thank you and great respect to you and to our forefathers; those brilliant minds that gave us all what we have today.
I was a telephone repairman during the 70s , 80s and 90s. This was quite interesting!
punchion, Déjà dans ces années là, c'était des téléphones en plastique avec quelques pièces encore en bakélite.
PAS EN BOIS !!
So this phone can never actually be used?
Ha!! No you werent Punchion . Trying to one up the guy who restored the phone? You sicken me pal!!
@@CleveIndians I was a repairman in Canada you dolt! Who the hell do you think you are! All I said was that I found the video interesting. And I'm not your pal!
@@punchionI dont know you so I assumed you knew it was a joke...relax
Amazing to believe that this was once the absolute height of technology - thank you so much for extending the life of this fantastic device!
I remember my Grandma having a phone similar to this model when I was as young as 4 years old. Im 59 now. So that would have been around 1967. Hudson Kansas kept using them into the 1960's and early 1970's when I was still a child. I had to stand on a kitchen chair in the livingroom to reach near the mouth piece. LOL Hudson only had a population of a few hundred people. The town is still active today with the flour mill and one cafe being the only businesses left. I remember talking to my Mother on this type of phone when I'd stay at my Grandmother's home in Hudson. They worked just fine to a child back then. I really enjoyed watching your video upload. It brought back lots of great memories. Thank you very much! 🤗
Oh all the conversations that have been spoken through this marvel. I wonder the same about my own antique telephone sometimes, but that one is not nearly that old, only about 50
I'm 72, from Ohio USA. My dad was the only lineman during WWII in a large, rural area. He bright all kinds of old and interesting items home to play with. We had 2 old crank phones, and a couple Frankenstein. Thanks for the memories!!
Look, everybody it's Mayberry r.f.d Of communications
I like projects like these, it really puts how far technology has advanced into perspective. Beautiful restoration.
I must admit that I'm impressed you found one of these phones with nearly all the original parts.
Thank you very much! We enjoy working on these types of older technologies, more unique projects coming soon!
did you restore it to working order or just to be a decoration on the wall @@BGRestore, though I suppose with our modern ech it wouldn't be compatible anymore..
While the manufacturing processes have been hugely refined over the decades, it's pretty amazing to me that the fundamental technology, and its interfaces, remain compatible for 120 years. Also, can you envision the survival, and functioning, of your iPhone until 2140?
@@stevejohnson1685 Well, my Nokia will be found by Aliens when we are long extinct :) And it will have 2 bars of battery left
@@PrometheusV and no signal bars... Good as new 👍
🤣
I've never seen the inner workings of a telephone from so long ago. Quite impressive and humbling to boot. Thank you for sharing!
I just discovered your video on this restoration and then watched the video of the typewriter. I don't know which is more amazing. Great job and heartwarming to see old technology brought back to life. God Bless what you do!
Beautiful work. My grandparents had one until it was smashed to bits by a lightning storm one afternoon. Exploded it all over the room (1948). 30 years later I build a replica, after finding a pair of the bells. I still have it as a door bell in my front hallway. Thank you for the video.
Ooo man got tears in my eyes my great Granny used to had this model really thankyou for restoring this
what, no sand blasting, no vinegar, no filing? This is the best channel i have found yet.
I started working For Western electric in 1966 we fixed up quarterfew of these, It took me many years to find a Western electric Wall phone in an old barn , And a candlestick with a subset in a falling down shed, Love your work waiting for more, Take care!!!
I loved that this type of phone is still around, even if they are not currently connected. I have only seen these in black and white movies, never seen one in my life. Who knows someday, we may be needing these again, and it's great to know there are people out there that knows how they work, like B&G Restore. Great Video.
There's a group of people I watched last night talk on phones just like that with the correct switch boards and everything. Including operators
I like how you guys give us history lessons along the project, so us the audience can learn while enjoying the restoration.
I remember as a kid when my uncle found a magneto similar to this one in a scrapyard and brought it home. We attached two wires and some brass tubing to it and used it to drive earthworms up for fishing bait. LOL Good memories and a great restoration job.
Totally enjoyable! I just wish you had one or two others so they could be connected and function. Nice videography, great detail and pacing. Thanks so much for posting this!
Thank you so much, that means a lot! We're planning to have a future videos with more telephones, so stay tuned :)
I like imagining he actually uses this from time to time to call his friends.
I remember using one of these until I was a teenage. Mind you, it was only connected to the neighbors farm that was located 1/4 mile away. It was a great aunt. She alwayed picked up, and it was fascinating to us as kids. I'm 63 yrs. old.
I'm most impressed by the fact that it still had that small spanner with it.
You HAVE to call Mr Carlson's Lab with it!
Brilliant stuff. The iPhone of its time. Thanks for sharing the rebuild and restoration.
The restoration craftsmanship sometimes rivals the original work! Well done!
Thank you so much, we appreciate it!
Love the way you showed what was supposed to be there for the shelf, even tho the vid is 10 months old
So THATS where the term ‘bars’ came from! I never thought about that before! That’s so neat!
After all this time, we still associate phone signal strength with the number of bars we have as a holdover from when this phone was introduced. Thank y'all for such an amazing video and especially the restoration of a piece of history.
What is funny to me is that my grandmother still used her phone when I was a kid (70s). Operators and designations (instead of area codes) were disappearing in our area when I was a kid. Wow... Times have changed more than I thought, looking back.
The wax to seal wires was amazing. The project was so amazing. Thank you
That telephone takes me back a few decades. My Great-grandfather, in the mid-1960's, still had one of those in his little country store (very rural NC). How rural? Wood stove for heating, oil lamps for lighting. Thanks for the fond memories of days gone by.
Nicely done restoration.
I just found your channel as this was a recommended video for YT. 🙂
I already realized it so of, just how different; our telephones were built/constructed. ☎️ 📲 📴 📞 📵 📳 ☎️
Was it one of those stores where people would come in and tell the clerk what they wanted, and the clerk would go in the back and get everything for the customer?
@@brianbaratheon no, not unless they were getting meats/cheeses to be sliced, or flour/sugar to be weighed.
Might I ask what part of North Carolina because my family originated from the Newton Grove/Clinton area
@Dangerous Moonwalker Of what I first didn't know about David Graue is that: he was a Flat Rock North Carolina resident. Regarding what was first unknown to me. It's just that I've already looked at and read, most of his early black and white comic strip series. Most of his early works were created during the entire 1970s. It's this era in particular. ⚫️ 🐈⬛️ ◼️ ⬛️ ♟️ ▪️ ⚫️ 😳
I'd love to see it working, & the process of giving it new power.
Nice, nice! With patina! No paint, no shiny metal!
I am on a POTS repair NOC Team for my work and I find stuff like this fascinating. Thanks for putting this up.
I just purchased two antique Kellogg telephones, one is from 1892, and just arrived! I am wanting to restore it, but it’s in pretty rough shape! I am glad you went into detail on the magneto, as mine is very difficult to turn, I also think from looking it over it’s had some clumsy repair work in the past! The wiring looks rough, but your video gave me confidence!
Wow, it was like a science class watching you revisit a bygone era. I was fascinated from start to finish. I congratulate you and thank you for sharing with us your passion and your love to perpetuate the beauties of the past. You have caught a new subscriber.
Glad you enjoyed it!
I love looking at antique machinery. So advanced for the times back then. But so primitive for modern times. It fascinates me.
Wow so cool!!!!!!! I love old technology! I actually have an old millimeter projector from the 1930's (or older, possibly) and if it ever breaks, I am hiring you 100%!
I'm so blown away by this restoration. I have been so curious about how these worked. Thank you for this video and thank you for sharing such an amazing piece of history with us. I look forward to many more amazing projects you all come up with.
Am I the only one getting anxiety watching him take this apart!? Lol. The amount of knowledge and skill you have is absolutely amazing, these phones are very rare and to restore one to new is amazing
Lovely. I like how you cleaned all the original parts and no expensive machinery to get it done.
Back when almost everything came in a wood, or metal box! Nowadays, everything is plastic! I remember seeing this type of telephone on Lassie back in the day, although I've never used one. Great restoration!
Truly fascinating... in just 120 years
we made a giant jump in telephone
development! To imagine that this
device was the latest state of
technology at that time -- mind-
blowing, simply mindblowing...
Imagine it took half that time from first flight to a trip to the moon.
@@nickr1184 > Even more incredible, indeed; and also the technical development in general -- in the last century we've made more progress than the whole millenium before!
It's a good thing you restored this phone, I've been trying to reach you about your car's extended warranty!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
So cool to see that a phone from two fellow swedish guys gets to live on. I wish i had that one. Really beautiful work
When I was a kid in the 50s and 60s, we had friends on a farm who still used a phone much like this. I loved it. Still do.
I subscribed as soon as I saw you superimpose the missing shelf as a wireframe into the video. Well done
Glad you enjoyed, reading your comment made it worth the effort 😂 Thanks for subscribing!
I love my old phones. As long as the elements are working you can hook it to the system and it will work. Well answering anyways. My boys loved answering the phone with mine. I need to get it out and hook it back up. I have a nice little collection and still enjoy using them. Especially my old rotary units. Great video and awesome work.
That sounds SO cool! Maybe you should set up an old phone museum kind of thing!
My great grandparents had a phone like this in their home up until their passing in their 90’s. As far as I know it was still there when the house was sold. Seeing this brought me happy memories of them ❤️
My Great Uncle worked for Stromberg Carlson in Rochester his whole life. My father sold phone service in Iowa for Stromberg Carlson in the early 60's. Excellent work! It is very cool to see a restoration project with a close personal tie. Thank you.
That's amazing, thanks for sharing!
Maybe now you and LADB Restoration can have a phone call... Lovely restoration!
Wow!!! What a transformation.
Witnessing your expertise and the intricacies of the reserection these time capsule devices is such a satisfying experience. Thank you so much! ❤❤
My dad bought a brand new Stromberg Carlson stereo sound sistem back in the 1980's. Just by readint the brand of the phone many memories have came back to my mind 😞😞. My dad passed away nine years ago, thanks for making me remember him. Oh, btw, excelent restoration 😊.
This was stunning, what a fabulous repair. Thank you so much, from south africa
I just love these antiques restoration videos. Time very well invested. Thank you for your videos. 🙏🏼
Glad you like them, our pleasure! :)
Wooow. Very nice Restoraiton Job.👌👍👍 Wonderful Antik 130 years old Telephone. My Favorite the Antic/Old Objects.❤💓💓
We're all watching this on devices that will never be as beautiful and durable as this.
Great work! I also was a telephone repair technician back in 1979 for Pacific Telephone & Telegraph. I enjoyed seeing your restoration of the old phone. Tip, Ring & Ground are the 3 wires used on the phone line, I can't forget it....❤
B&G Restore my darlings, it’s incredible to see a telephone from the past. When I was a small child occasionally I saw one of these telephones. The memories that are connected with the phone are stored in my head forever. Thank you for allowing me to remember those days from the past. Take care and stay safe 🌹😇🌈🌞👍🎈🕊🇺🇸❤️🙏
Great job in the restoration. Can't wait to see more restoration projects from you guys!
Stromberg Carlson old American 4/5 radios are still going strong today with channels restoring them. Good strong stuff.
OK, That was truly magical as I was in awe at the detail and clarity of this production. 35 minutes of pure enjoyment. Wow great production.
I love old telephones like that
I love the constant look of distress on its eyes.
I have a 1890's Western Electric Double box with the original dry batteries from 1905. This video is going to get me starting to restore mine!
What talent! And what a BEAUTIFUL piece of Americana!! 🇺🇸☮️♥️
Surely its audio is better than a modern smartphone... and beautiful
Very impressive restoration. I have done several, neither as in depth as yours. I removed all components and polished then clear coated everything plated and repainted what was black. Then refinished the wood and reassembled. While my restorations looked beautiful, sadly I lost the ring. On one phone I was very pleased to see the internal part of the ear piece date stamped 1909.
Very labor intensive job restoring one of these phones, definitely a labor of love, but worth it if you love them!
That is exquisitely beautiful! It's so nostalgic and a reminder of a simpler and much less frenetic lifestyle. Your work is amazing.
Were you around in the 20s and 30s?
Nope, but not too long after the 30's. I remember seeing some of these around as well as how Bell Telephone operators had to manually re-route calls, party lines, and rotary phones were the only type available. And of course I remember private companies having their own little switchboards (many made by Western Electric) run by a real-live human being, before today's electronic switches, know as PBX's. Or have we even moved past that now? I retired some years ago and truly don't know anymore. Cell phones may even have made that obsolete..😉😁
Excellent video! Well done on the restoration. I have this same Stromberg-Carlson phone. I’ve connected it to several other antique phones in my house via a line simulator (Teltone TLS-4). My kids love calling this phone from our rotary phone. They get excited every time the bells ring! I hope you’re able to see this phone in action too! Thank you for sharing!
That is a work of art, it should be displayed in the Louvre museum alongside the Mona lisa.
Thank You! Wouldn't happen to have her number, would you? ;)
@@BGRestore 😂😂😂
Excellent metal work restoration.
I have a 1908 Ericsson "Commonwealth" walnut phone with an ear/mic. handpiece. It was used on our sheep & cattle station until about 1960.
Your illustrated data shows the "earth return" system which can be used instead of two wires; as the name implies, the ground makes up half the circuit - in our situation this was for one mile distance to the other homestead on the property.
Many find this hard to believe since the two batteries only provide 3 volts but the transformer boosts the 'alternating voice current' enough to overcome the resistance of the earth!
Regards.
I recently got one almost exactly like this and I am nervous to start restoring it. This makes me really want to get started.
I’ve always been great at taking things apart, I can just never get them back together lol.
I have a book from 1913 about telephony. After looking at that you could build a telephone company from spare bits and chewing gum!
Very nice restoration. The thing that really stands out is how tight the grain is on the original wood compared to the new wood used for the shelf. It probably would have taken old-growth lumber to even come close.
Incredible amount of parts.
Personal experience with this phone: When I was a little kid in the 1950's (yes I'm old), my grandmother who lived on a rural route in Pennsylvania had a phone similar to this. It was on a party line. For all you kids out there that means everybody in the area shared one line. If you needed to use the phone and someone was on it you waited or cut in on them asking them to get off. Anybody could listen in on your phone call including the neighborhood gossip. It was like the Twittr of the olden days. To call out you had to crank it and the operator came on and you told her what number to call. Maybe you remember from the Andy Griffin show sheriff Taylor would have to get Sara on the line to dial out. At the end of this video when I saw how much the people had to pay it's no wonder my poor grandparents had kept that phone. Thanks for the memories and you did a great job.
Saw the thumbnail and said omg Pop Pop, he had 3 of those old phones, (non working) first time watcher, now I'm a subscriber
I have one of theese, its sitting on my wall for decoration, it still works mechanically. My father restored it, it was the original phone from his parents first house the built wayyyyy back in the 30s. When he restored it, the phone was not in as bad of shape as the one here, it's a beautiful piece, the coolest thing about the moving parts is the fact they were all hand machined, back when there were no automated cnc milling and lathes. Things were built with skill, pride, and made to last!! Great job!! Love restoration videos, you earned another sub!! Take care!!
Couldn't agree more, thank you very much for sharing! :)
I remember seeing a similar style phone that was modified. The area under the shelf was actually boxed in and part of the shelf was hinged allowing the shelf to lift up exposing a DTMF pad and where below was hidden the telephone network allowing the phone to work on modern lines. The magneto had been removed replaced by a false handle that could turn. The area where the magneto and the batteries once were housed was modified by removing the shelf allowing one to store a small personal telephone book.
Can you imagine sitting in an old kitchen during a thunder storm and looking up at the phone to catch sparks flying between the lightning arrestor contacts caused by a nearby strike or static buildup.
This was an interesting video showing how man used what technology and materials he had available to him to provide a useful tool.
Wow! How fascinating was this!
Fantastic! it certainly does remind us of how far we have come
The circuit would need a little modification for a standard landline.
I can tell you as a vampire this was the best time to be kind of alive. You had the ability to call someone halfway across the world, and you weren’t always being watched or listened to. I ate wonderfully back then.
You did a good job. Being a retired repairman I couldn't help but think about all the history was being scratched off. I have an old Kellogg wall phone and I haven't done anything to restore. I've kept it original.
Beautifully done. I am working on a Northern Electric N1300. Great to see how it is done before I finish off on my project.
Thank you! Glad to hear that, we hope to see the finished project :)
I also picked up a Northern Electric however, I cannot find any numbers so not sure what I’ve got in regards to age. But it is great to watch and has been a tremendous inspiration. Thank you for sharing
Good Job-I have one of these phones-came from my Grandparent's farm back in Wisconsin-has the batteries & all.
Great video! It’s just like the one in my grandparents old farm.
Ive been looking for more restoration stuff that wasnt just knives and lighters and this was recommended, great work! Ive subbed and cant wait for more videos!
Excellent work great craftsmanship a man that knows his job doing these phones I love antique phones especially the older ones back in the 1900s but excellent job way to go bro
Beautifully done
I like projects ....like these ...fun to watch , thank you
Great skill and patience is a blessing restoring this work of art. Great job!
That was so incredibly cool.
I like it when it's restored, because it's good as new.
Somewhere in my shop, I have just the reciever... Would have been good to donate it to the project. Well done!
I’m interested in learning more about that century
Wow! This restoration is better than perfect!
I have an old crank wall phone that looks like this one. I am sure it's made by a different company though. Was raised by grandparents in an old farm house. Th crank phone was used and was on a 5 party line our ring was two longs and a short. You had to go thru a switchboard with a live operator to call out. After that it was replaced with a heavy black desk rotary phone made out of plastic bakelite (sp?) stuff used back then. My crank bells are the original black and it still rings when you crank it. Wonder what these phones go for now as antiques? Fantastic restoration. Did not realize it had a bazillion parts to it. Sheesh!!
Greetings from Australia Ben and Gwen! I really enjoyed this video and the technicalities of restoring it! I'm in my 70's and grew up on a farm in Australia and we had a perhaps slightly more modern piece of the same phone equipment Made n the 30's and 40's it was made from black material- possibly like a 'bakalight' ? In those days we all rented the phones. To speak on the phone to my grandma I had to stand on a chair or be held up by my mum/dad. Our ph no when I was about 6 was 246! LOL it was screwed into the wall and had the horn shape ear piece and you spoke into the trumpet thing on the wall.You had to wind the handle on the RHS and hold the trumpety earpiece in your left hand. There was an operator who asked your number and the number you were calling etc. I found a very similar one on a website but was unable to post it here. Love your channel- Thanks for the enjoyment! Take care.
This is a video I enjoyed watching so much. thank you and great respect to you and to our forefathers; those brilliant minds that gave us all what we have today.
Beautiful workmanship!
Beautiful. Amazing and beautiful
Waiting for next video when it will become fully functional 😊
Indeed,...
Wish it could be 'hook-up' again. . .