Sign in   |  Join   |  Help
Untitled Page

ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022
READ ONLY FORUM

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

 

Beomaster 900M glass panel

rated by 0 users
This post has 8 Replies | 1 Follower

peternovy
Not Ranked
Posts 53
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
peternovy Posted: Sat, May 26 2018 9:33 AM

Hi Guys,

 

my Beomaster 900M has two blemishes on the glass panel:

- there is some kind of spray residue (contact cleaner?) around the volume and tuning knobs, there seems to be some kind of additional layer attached to the front glass panel and this seems to be in between the two layers

- the right end of the plastic rail is broken off.

So my questions to the experts are is it possible to clean the glass panel in that area, is there some trick to do it, or should I look for a replacement panel (donor unit?)? Any help or suggestions would be appreciated! I love the look of this earlier version of the Beomaster 900 vs the later one and would love to bring it to a better condition. 

(And it does have a stereo decoder!)

Thanks as always,

Piotr

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sat, May 26 2018 10:48 AM

The dial (acryllic) glass rubs on the backdrop metal plate, causing the areas with grey "spots".
Take off the dial and polish (only) the affected areas with Novus #2 or similar.

The broken memory bar will have to be replaced, it's glued to the dial.
And the memory pointers seem to be missing. 

Martin

peternovy
Not Ranked
Posts 53
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
peternovy replied on Sun, May 27 2018 10:23 AM

Thanks Martin! The polishing should be easy to do, I do have some polishing paste that I used for my turntable dust cover. The memory pointers of course are missing, but I imagine the only way to replace the bar is to take a complete one out of a donor unit.

So I took the chassis out of the case, but how do I take the dial off?

It seems to be held by something, but I don't want to unscrew the wrong thing - I don't know if I'll be able to put it all back together if it falls apart! :)

tournedos
Top 10 Contributor
Finland
Posts 7,357
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
Moderator
tournedos replied on Sun, May 27 2018 12:04 PM

The answer is very near in your photo. That metal thingy around the volume pot shaft is a nut. As far as I remember, there’s another one around the tuning knob, and removing those should do it...

--mika

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sun, May 27 2018 4:21 PM

What Mika just said - and some Beomasters also have short pieces of black tape from the dial edges to the chassis.

Martin

peternovy
Not Ranked
Posts 53
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
peternovy replied on Sat, Jun 30 2018 1:28 PM

Ok, so it took a while to find the time for this, but finally I did and took the panel off. It turned out that it was only some residue, probably from a deoxit-type spray, that essentially I was able to wipe off. I also took the opportunity to clean the panel, the knobs, buttons and so on, so that it now looks a bit nicer :) Thank you very much Mika and Martin for the advice! As usual it was spot on! The only thing left is the dial bar with the markers, but I can live with it for now until I find the part or a cheap donor unit somewhere online.

Here are some pictures, the BM900 now looks very nice with my Type B's :)

CB
Top 75 Contributor
> You are Here <
Posts 1,762
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
CB replied on Sat, Jun 30 2018 2:29 PM

Good job !

It's beautiful Yes - thumbs up

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sat, Jun 30 2018 2:50 PM

I agree.
Well done.
And a very nice setup. They don't make them like this anymore.

Martin

peternovy
Not Ranked
Posts 53
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
peternovy replied on Sat, Jun 30 2018 3:18 PM

That is actually something I am puzzled with: why does the audio equipment nowadays look so uniform and boring? Of course, an analog radio dial is obsolete today, and that's half of the charm, but I am sure one could come up with better designs than just a black box with a couple of black knobs, and additionally would not add too much to the price. I primarily mean the mass-market stuff, but the high-end audio is not that much better. 

In any case, it is good that it some of the older units still can give so much joy :)

 

 

Page 1 of 1 (9 items) | RSS