Yes, the miscommunication seems to have arisen by my typing
page 3 (File page 3, that is) instead of
page 2.
Our high school science club found an old Webster-Chicago portable wire recorder stuck away in a cabinet. It was a beauty. Weighed about 900 pounds, with a solid wood case, Deco-y metal faceplate, and Bakelite knobs. The heavy triangular mike was made of steel, as near as I could tell. The machine recorded and played back perfectly. There were several spools of wire with it. One was the play-by-play of a high school football game. I remember being surprised how good the fidelity was, though I imagine it wouldn't be much by today's standards. It looked like this:
It's funny that one other thing I remember about the unit is its smell. There was a particular aroma, not an unpleasant one, about the case and the removable top. Years later I was poking around the insides of a 1940s radio-phonograph at an antique store when the same smell hit me. It was one of those cool moments when for an instant you jump back in time and re-experience the sights and sounds of days gone by. I'm guessing that the "Webcor smell" had something to do with a combination of wood and fabric that the recorder shared with the phonograph.
I have the disassembled remains of a small console radio-phono-wire recorder in the Garage of Doom. I'd always hoped some day to put it together and get it to work. One odd feature is that the transport for the wire recorder is built into the turntable base. The supply spool clips onto its shaft here. The take-up reel is permanently attached to the bottom of the turntable and is the same diameter. It seems like the turntable motor must drive the wire mechanism. Does it have a transmission of some kind that switches between disc player and wire recorder mode? I can't tell.