Restoring a General Radio 107N variable inductor

I recently acquired a General Radio 107N variable inductor. The front panel was in good shape but the enclosure, made of solid walnut boards, had a lot of damage to the finish. My goal is to clean the front panel, clean and lubricate the main and vernier dials and restore the enclosure as period-correctly as possible.
 

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Looking at old GenRad catalogs, they refer to the finish as “polished walnut”. After a bit of online research and my own examination of the enclosure itself, I have concluded that that original finishing schedule was an application of sanding sealer (shellac), followed by grain filler, another coat of sealer (shellac), then top-coated with lacquer. Lacquer at the time was either nitrocellulose or phenolic. Close examination of lacquer flakes from off the cabinet look lighter then phenolic; my educated guess is that it is nitrocellulose that has darkened over the decades.

I was originally going to strip the finish using Formby’s furniture refinisher. Unfortunately, my container of refinisher got contaminated and in the interim my fair state has outlawed the stuff.

So I began by hand sanding with 150 grit sandpaper. Progress will be photographed. Pictured below is the finish next to sanded bare for contrast.
 

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Hi Brinkman
I wish you have a good time restoring the housing of this beautiful instrument. It worths it.

Mine (107M) is true to dial’s indications. I haven’t tested for self resonance.

George
 

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Progress

I have sanded all sides to 220 grit. Weather permitting, tomorrow I will remove the enclosure from the body and begin sealing with shellac and with luck, begin filling the grain.
 

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In the shop over the years, I've restored several "antique" radios for customers.
Ranging from a floor console RCA "Radiola", a 1920's Emerson console, Atwater kent sets, and those "coffin box" multi-dial table sets.


A coffin box 3-knob set came in once from as guy, I think it had 5 tubes inside.

The customer complained after he took it home, that he couldn't tune in AM broadcast except for only one station (1600Khz).
I told him that his radio, numerous times, was designed for the old radio band, starting around 1600 Khz and up.
 
Enclosure after a coat of dewaxed shellac (left) and then after one application of grain filler (right).
 

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