No ivory, just 1930s plastic, presumably a bakelite type material. Aside from those funky waxpaper caps and a few drifty carbon comp resistors the materials used in these instruments were pretty amazing. Palladium wire for key contacts, oil filled filter capacitors that still read to spec, amazing attenuators on the expression pedals that are stepped but sound continuous, an oiling system for the rotating parts that uses threads to constantly wick oil to the bushings, they even spent some time figuring out how to mouse-proof the thing as much as possible.
Colin and I got the second tone cabinet running last night, which has this crazy oil filled reverb unit in it. A separate tube amp drives springs that are damped in oil filled columns, and a Rochelle salt pickup sends the reverb signal back to the amp to be blended with the main signal. Sounds pretty funky, virtually no treble in the reverb, but I was amazed that the crystal pickup hadn't dissolved over the past 70 years. I have a newer spring reverb tank to install, which is what Hammond did to update these cabinets. Will try both ways, but I may just stay with the bizarre old oil one. How's it sound? Imagine sitting in the ball park listening to Take Me Out To the Ballgame
Re the organ jokes, you can imagine the response I got when texting Jacqui as I described looking inside her huge old organ for the first time and seeing lots of dust and corrosion. On the bright side, all of the important parts still seemed to be there.