The Air-Way Has Landed!

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hismastersvoice

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 24, 2014
Messages
179
Location
Ferndale, MI
FedEx delivered a huge box this morning, I wasn't expecting it to come until next week! After some light cleaning, she's looking pretty good! Everything is original, it even had an original Air-Way cellulose paper bag in it still (unfortunately it was full of dirt and falling apart, so I disposed of it.) One more "want" to check off of my growing list...now I just need to find a set of attachments for it.

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LOOKS...

So good in your vintage kitchen.They are a fun machine to collect.To bad the filter bag was full and coming apart.To find some bags;you might contact Air-way Charlie,as he is a big collector of Airway uprights.He may be able to help you find some.He has great knowledge on these and has made some replacement parts.
Enjoy your new find.
Michael
 
Michael, thank you - I've contacted Charlie regarding the bags and what type of brushes these take. I think they are a bit worn down. I'm thrilled with this machine, maybe I'll have to switch from Kirbys to Air-Ways!

...just kidding ;-)
 
LOVELY Air-Way, it looks BEAUTIFUL! It's a shame I never see anything Air-Way down here, besides a Vita-Vac a year or so ago! 
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Now, that would certainly look smashing next to a Eldridge Johnson's 1900 line Victor! It would make even the most ridged of personality's swoon, or at least get a good case of the vapors.


 


Nice looking machine!!!
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Now, that's what I wanted to see, but artistically, they both enjoy the same curvilinear form....beautiful! Your Victor Royal seems to be in primo condition....That's about $1500 worth of loveliness!
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I came across this 1900 Edison Record just the other day, still in its original sleeve, which I have never seen one joined to the other before. And of course, it's on an Edison Victrola platter. I'm pretty sure it's an Edison, because some numbskull refinished it, leaving no trace, but its movement is definitely an Edison without any modifications. 

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AirWay!!!

One of the very best I have ever seen.Although one of mine has a slightly better bag.There was a description of the special equipment used to make and weave the cloth bags in an early AW company newsletter.Your home looks as if it could have been used for the photos in the owners manual.But all pics now should only be in color which it appears you are not afraid of.All looks great!!
 
Yes, I tried to clean the stains on the bag with woolite, but they didn't come out. I'll be on the lookout for a nicer one, of course.

And thanks all for the compliments!
 
Beautiful AirWay!

And I love your collection of Victrolas too! I have 2, and probably about 600 records. One is a New Century that has been in my family since it was new. The other is a Cecilian portable--when closed it looks like a small suitcase with a crank hanging out of it! Sorry I don't have pics of either one.
Interesting fan that your Victor R is sitting on--never seen one like that before.
Jeff
 
Brandon, I agree with you about the desirability of Detroit living/visiting; there's a level of good living still alive and well. Downtown core&#92has become once again a civilized destination.
My first experiences in Detroit was a a young lad when Dad would take us from London Ontario for the annual summertime trek to Greenfield Village and the Ford Museum (on the way to the cottage) to gape in awe at planes and locomotives and household goods tracing their advancement over decades. It sparked my interest in all things well made and styled. Not to mention the astounding Automotive Museums that have sprung up over the years, sponsored by all the Corporations involved in their manufacture.
I remember well back in the late 1970s through the 1980s you could get yourself a fine large home for back taxes, say in the Indian Village, while mere blocks away residences were crumbling and decayed beyond salvation. Detroit being the North American Center of the Automotive Universe created multi-class wealth and prosperity. Detroit households always had the best of everything in modern household goods so as the recession deepened and the natural aging effect was felt excellent quality goods made their way to the various Second Hand shops. The treasures I found over the years continue to comfort me, in this age of plastics and throw-a-way cheapness.
My interests being mechanically inclined my hobbies have encompassed, besides Vacuums and Appliances, Phonographs, Architecture, Design, vintage cars, Movie Palaces, Films, Organs and especially Automatic Music Instruments for the masses at skating rinks,speakeasys and hotels - orchestrions, player pianos, reproducing grands and organs no upper class home could be complete without and the like. I began snapping up masses of 1930-50s recordings and decided at last I must have Phonographs to play them on. Since most of my floorspace is taken up with self-playing pianos I decided to have an Victor Orthophonic and a Edison Diamond Disk to play them on...and found good examples of each in the Detroit area.
All of this pleasure in music led me to build a perforated roll scanner that then produces midi files (including expression coding) I can cue up for hours of a background household entertainment soundtrack on the digital piano on the second floor. Sure trumps today's radio, tv and constant advertising for domestic contentment.

Every year, weather permitting I spend a few days in & around Detroit at the North American International Auto Show and revisiting favorite haunts such as Dodge's Meadowbrook Hall, The Edsel Ford house and Fairlane, Henry's estate. For a surprisingly minor fee one can have free rein to explore these houses and estates. Although I will never live such a life it's enough to simply walk around inside such homes imagining how glorious it must have been. My idea of a wintertime vacation is to hit the road searching out 'America's Castles' from coast to coast, picking up a few choice momentoes along the way.

Back to my point, it's good to see someone embracing the best of the past at your young age.
My hope that someday we will meet up.
62 year old Davy
 
Dave,

If you like Automated Music, you should make a point to visit Barrington Hills, IL sometime. A friend of mine, Jasper Sanfilippo, has the largest collection of orchestrions and automatic music machines I know of. You can spend all day walking around his house just staring in awe. He also owns Wurlitzer opus #1571, which has 5 manuals and 80 ranks. He opens his house to the public every year after the Union Phonograph Show in June. He keeps trays of coins next to all of the coin-op stuff so people can use them, and hires docents to demonstrate the larger machines as you walk through the house.

When I die, I want to spend eternity there.

http://www.sanfilippofoundation.org/index.html

This was a few years ago in front of the M. Welte & Söhne dance organ he has in the foyer area, one of my favorites in the collection.

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Getting back to the Air-Way, does anyone know a modern filter bag that will fit this vacuum? And what type of motor brushes it takes? They are a bit worn.
 

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