![]() You can hear one of these on U-tube, I looked at it last week. No matter how much you spend out, it will still be worth almost zero when you've finished - but you will have brought a lovely old girl back to life! We can and will give you lots of advice on all of this.Īs for the weight, heavy! Two burly guys should shift it but the more bodies the better, especially when it comes to stairs, steps and loading it onto a truck! All of this is par for the course for an instrument of this age, and it's done by the new owner as a labour of love. The internal rotary speaker - the 'Spectratone' - will need lubrication, and you may be looking at re-coning or replacing the speakers. The others will be affecting the tone of the organ and it will gain a new lease of life when these are all changed - there will probably be a lot! Contacts for the keys, pedals and switches will all need cleaning. The ones in the power supply should be replaced for safety reasons. Electrolytic capacitors in the power supply and elsewhere in the organ will have deteriorated over time. 2) At 50, unless it's had a thorough overhaul in recent times, there's going to be a bit of work to be done to get it working safely and properly. 1) It's realistically worth almost zero, so don't pay much - if anything. Nothing flashy or fancy, but a solid, warm sound that still has plenty of fans on here. Very much 'old school' Wurlitzer home organ sounds. It's a model 4500, from way back in 1964. ![]()
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