I dug out my old first enlarger last week, a Gnome "Universum" last week, I noticed woodworm holes in the base board. Back in 1968 a local radio & TV parts depot (every town had them for valves etc, to supply the local radio & TV repair shops) had a small photo section, mostly materials and a few second hand items, they were not a camera shop. That summer I cycled there regularly hoping to find a second hand enlarger, they took my parent's telephone number.
Then one day I had a phone call, I have an enlarger for you, pop down. When I got there I was told they'd had a massive tidy up and found an enlarger, new but the case was damaged, and it had been there quite a few years. I asked how much, the deal was free as long as I bought an enlarger lens from them. Of course, it was no-brainer.
That was 56 years ago, I used the enlarger for 7 years, making prints up to 20"x16". After treating the woodworm yesterday, I realised I could easily repair the case, the enlarger breaks down into a wooden box. The problem was caused by the poor quality ply-wood used back in 1948 when the enlarger was introduced. But that was a time of severe austerity here in the UK, almost all imports were banned without a special licence, rationing was more severe than during WWII, as we were feeding some of the Dutch & Germans as well while they recovered agriculturally.
Aside from the wooden case, it's a well made & designed compact enlarger, typical German engineering, although made in Wales

The founder of Gnome, Heinrich Loebstein, had a similar business in Stuttgart, but had fled the Nazi's.
The enlarger uses a 12v car head-light bulb and a 240:12V transformer, the ground glass diffuser got broken many years ago, I need to determine the diameter and get some glass cut, for a new one.
So for the first time in 56 years, the case works & actually locks in place. All the original woodwork had a grey flock finish, inside and outside the case, the base-board being an integral part of the case. Can O be bothered . . . . . . .
Ian