ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
Thanks again to Wouter for sending me this nice Beocord!
Here it is, after some cosmetic cleaning. No nicks to spoil its looks!
The to do's so far:
- The record switch has erratic contacts, making one or both channels disappear or hum,
- The head is strongly misaligned,
- The motor is noisy, but this is a quality Swiss motor - as seen in the Beocord 5000 4715 - so it should be fine,
- Two buttons are broken (fast-forward and pause), with the eject one being close to breaking,
- New caps,
- Thorough inside cleaning (something was spilled inside).
The mech does work fine, although it is a bit hard, so maybe new grease will be necessary, with a more complex dismantling.
I could not find any views of the inside, so I will show it here. The take-apart method is nowhere to be found either, but I figured it out...
Jacques
Great thread Jacques, looking forward to progress being made! I'm sure you will have it up to scratch within no time
Ben.
Thanks, there's not much information on this particular Beocord. The manual is available here, but a few pages are missing, so I might consider buying the real McCoy on eBay.
I guess the broken keys will be hard to find though... and I do not like the glueing solution at all.
The wooden trims are easy to work on (they are removable) and this will be my first job. The side cheeks are black anodized alu and the wood is glued directly onto the painted casts, and the front trim is glued on a bigger part, with painted profiles, so more fragile.
Here's how you open the beast. Nothing really mysterious but a little observation was required.
Unscrew the three A screws completely. Don't touch the small allen grub screws on their left side, these are used to abjust the cover plate.
Take the cover plate up, then draw it towards you gently. Put it aside.
Now we have to take the left and right cheeks out. Unscrew the two small grub screws a little, until you are able to rotate the alu plate (now free to move to the side, upper part only) then lift it out. Same operation at the other side.
Now it's time to remove the control panel. Since there are no connectors, you will have to move it conveniently to work without dismantling anything more.
Just unscrew the four screws (two each side) and like before rotate the plate (lift the back slightly) then take it out.
Pull (or push!) a little towards the back of the deck to free it.
Now you can get to the serious things!
Nice project! I have one in the girls' homework room. It and the very similar BC2400 I have out in the garage are great little playback decks. Have fun!
Jacques, I`m glad to see that you are happy with it! I completely missed this thread. Is it up and running?
Wouter
Almost!
The mechanics are restored (not much else to do than cleaning), new keys fitted.
The recap job is not yet done, but it plays music!
Good job!
I am actually! Pity the VU-meters only work when recording though. Perhaps there is a mod?
Rich, I still have your MMC4... Don't you want it back?
chartz:I am actually! Pity the VU-meters only work when recording though. Perhaps there is a mod?
chartz: Rich, I still have your MMC4... Don't you want it back?