FB: Cerveny 5V F Kaiser
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Re: FB: Cerveny 5V F Kaiser
Even the outer casings increased in diameter? Cool! Wasn’t aware of that.the elephant wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 6:46 pm Same as B&S. The original Symphonie had five different rotors, too.
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Re: FB: Cerveny 5V F Kaiser
@matt g
Thanks to Jake for the image…
Thanks to Jake for the image…
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- matt g (Tue Apr 12, 2022 4:17 pm)
Re: FB: Cerveny 5V F Kaiser
It appears to be a left hand thumb lever like a couple other cervenys I've seen.
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- Rick Denney
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FB: Cerveny 5V F Kaiser
My first Symphonie (first generation) as had clock springs and the fifth was operated by the left thumb on the backside.
Either the Cerveny or the early Symphonie was obviously a collaboration or an approved ripoff—both being under “central planning”. I can’t tell from these pictures which might have come first.
My current Symphonie is from the last batch made from available parts right around unification. By that time, Cerveny’s F (653?) was very different.
Rick “wondering if this came from a pile of B&S parts” Denney
Either the Cerveny or the early Symphonie was obviously a collaboration or an approved ripoff—both being under “central planning”. I can’t tell from these pictures which might have come first.
My current Symphonie is from the last batch made from available parts right around unification. By that time, Cerveny’s F (653?) was very different.
Rick “wondering if this came from a pile of B&S parts” Denney
Re: FB: Cerveny 5V F Kaiser
From the text of the ad:Rick Denney wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 9:40 am My first Symphonie (first generation) as had clock springs and the fifth was operated by the left thumb on the backside.
Either the Cerveny or the early Symphonie was obviously a collaboration or an approved ripoff—both being under “central planning”. I can’t tell from these pictures which might have come first.
My current Symphonie is from the last batch made from available parts right around unification. By that time, Cerveny’s F (653?) was very different.
Rick “wondering if this came from a pile of B&S parts” Denney
From the estimated date range, I'm not sure how much central planning was in vogue at the time.Bore: 18.2mm-18.2mm-19.00mm-19.8mm-21.0mm
Overall Length: 40”
Weight: 16.5#
Bell diameter: 18”
Valves: 5
Date: 1918-1925
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Re: FB: Cerveny 5V F Kaiser
Yeah, I had not read the text of the ad--I can't always see FB ads on the systems I use. The date kills everything I said before.
If the 1920ish date is correct, it would suggest to me that B&S's Symphonie didn't plow fresh earth the way we always thorught. Indeed, the whole architecture of this instrument seems to create the pattern B&S followed three decades later. This isn't surprising, of course--the York pattern was ignored for several decades before being revived, mostly because of Jacobs.
Notwithstanding the similar layout and the graduated bore, this instrument is just plain bigger than any Symphonie. It almost seems like Cerveny's answer to the Eb Monsters being made in the US at the time.
Rick "there must be some historical connection, but what it is might remain a mystery" Denney
If the 1920ish date is correct, it would suggest to me that B&S's Symphonie didn't plow fresh earth the way we always thorught. Indeed, the whole architecture of this instrument seems to create the pattern B&S followed three decades later. This isn't surprising, of course--the York pattern was ignored for several decades before being revived, mostly because of Jacobs.
Notwithstanding the similar layout and the graduated bore, this instrument is just plain bigger than any Symphonie. It almost seems like Cerveny's answer to the Eb Monsters being made in the US at the time.
Rick "there must be some historical connection, but what it is might remain a mystery" Denney
Re: FB: Cerveny 5V F Kaiser
Logo plate is definitely post-WWI, and the overall model features (wide kranz, valve details, etc.) plus the fact that it's a logo plate makes it appear to be pre-WWII, but I'm not an expert.