Original transcriber's skeleton. See pictures. The tonearm screws that ensure proper balance need adjusting, and a new belt is needed (can be ordered from the original maker's son, David Gammon).
The turntable is spectacular and the design is so unique that it redefines the style of the environment in which it is placed.
Historical note: After the advent of the CD, virtually every turntable manufacturing company went out of business. David Gammon needed about half a million pounds to upgrade his company, and when he was refused a bank loan, he hired a digger, dug a hole behind his factory, and buried all the turntables and their manufacturing machinery. This is one of the reasons why some models are so rare.