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ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022
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This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022

 

I did a dumb thing with my Beocord 5500

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Brian
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Texas, USA
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Brian Posted: Wed, Apr 4 2012 5:43 PM

I am embarrassed to admit this, but here goes.  While replacing belts on my Beocord 5500, I forgot to unplug the unit and it was in standby.  I touched the metal frame of the drive mechanism against the top circuit board which was in the service position and 'POP'.  I found a blown resistor at the R28 location, replaced it to no avail.

When I play back a tape, it sounds like the voices are on helium, even though the tape speed seems correct.  All other tape functions seem to work properly, although I have not tried recording.

I then replaced approximately 20 resistors, transistors and caps in the same electric path.   Again, no joy.  I have come to the conclusion that the area in the board I have been working on is for record, not playback.  Again, still not tested because I really do not need it to record.

I can read a schematic to figure out what to replace, but can not for the life of me figure out where I should be concentrating my efforts on this board.  Parts are cheap and I do not mind replacing a bunch, although the whole board might be a problem.

So, can anybody tell me where I should be looking on this board?  Or perhaps someone has a circuit board for sale.

Thanks for all the help.

Dillen
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Copenhagen / Denmark
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Dillen replied on Wed, Apr 4 2012 5:49 PM

R28 is in the bias oscillator. Is it running at the correct frequency and voltage (depending on tape type) ?
The bias osc. is not active in playback so there must be something else wrong, are you sure about the tape speed ?
Is the power supply giving out clean and correct voltages ?

Martin

Brian
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Texas, USA
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Brian replied on Thu, Apr 5 2012 4:23 AM

Hey Martin - Thanks for the info.  I am not totally sure about the tape speed, but when I listen to something with both voice and music (Peter and the wolf is the only cassette I have available) the instrumentation sounds close to correct, but the voice is way too high pitched.  I would appreciate it if you could tell where to measure the tape voltages and where the test points are.  I can not find anything in my service manuals (I only have schematics).

Thanks - Brian

Dillen
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Dillen replied on Thu, Apr 5 2012 7:10 AM

Measure the power supply outputs and check with a scope for ripple.
The tape speed is checked with a strobe- or pegel tape or, for a rough estimate, by compared listening
to f.e. a CD with the same audio material.

Martin

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