There have been a few Transcriptors pictures in this thread, but not the Skeleton.
Brings back memories. In the late '70s I bought a Skeleton from an defunct store (they are all pretty much defunct these days) called Sound Gallery in Winter Park, Fl. There were three arm options available: Transcriptors Vesitgal, Mayware Formula 4, and Grace 707. Instead of the Vestigal and/or Formula 4, both of which I considered too flaky, even for me, I had the dealer install the Grace.
The deck was quite impressive, visually. That much is certain.
However, after a few years the motor died. You have to remember that back then there was no Internet of things, and the company was in (I believe) Ireland. The story I heard was that they were out of business, as was the Sound Gallery. No local fix-it shop would touch it. So I was stuck with ten or twenty pounds of plate glass, chrome and black plastic.
One day I happened to be slumming in another dealer's shop, across the street (Absolute Sound, the local McIntosh franchisee--long gone, too), talking to the owner. I casually mentioned I had a glass record player sitting in a closet, out of service. He was familiar with it, expressed an interest, and we negotiated a trade. I transferred the deck to him for a new Denon 103D, which was my favorite cartridge at that time. I think the D retailed for around three hundred USD, or thereabouts. Not really sure from memory.
Dealer said he wasn't interested in fixing it (about that time digits were becoming a thing, and that is what people wanted). Instead, he placed it in his storefront window, simply as a curiosity for sidewalk traffic. Told me that passerbys who were otherwise not audiophiles would actually come into his store to inqure about the oddity.
Sometimes I see them on the auction sites going for silly money. One thing--the glass was much better visually than any plastic or Lucite, as it wouldn't yellow--or scratch.
Final factoid: the company also made a 'straight line tracking' table. Typical Transcriptors weirdness, the tonearm didn't move across the record... the platter moved across a fixed tonearm. Few would have ever had the intelligence or commerical business sense to try and get something like that to work! Which from what I understand, didn't.