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
Hi,
I am eyeballing Beogram record players already for quite some time but never got one because the available ones seemed crazy expensive.
Then two weeks ago I found an offer of a "water damaged" 4002 on eBay. I offered the seller half of what he was asking and to my surprise got the player for 150€.
Since I love restoring old things as I see it a bit as a puzzle for adults its a win win for me. Especially since I am not a collector but just love the look and sound of the Beograms and am rebuilding it for my own use.
After taking it apart I found that the water damage is not a bit of water that ran into it but it must have stayed in water for quite some time.
My first step was to clean everything up. I cleaned the electronic elements with alcohol and sandblasted the inner side of the housing with wallnut. Unfortunately the outer side of the cover is a bit corroded meaning I have to completely repaint it. And this is also what brings me to my first questions:
Did anyone ever print the text and signs (PLAY -----> TRANSP., Made in Denmark *and square* usw.) on foil and transfered it to a newly painted housing? Or is the Black/Silver CD4 OFF Sticker available somewhere?
In terms of the electronics I am replacing all capacitors which is quite easy since they say exactly what they are. Its a bit more tricky for the carbon potentiometers which are pretty rusted away. Can anyone help me what exactly to get here?
I left the title quite vage since I believe I will have a lot more questions to follow after these two so I think its better to keep it on a project level.
Here is a picture how it looked when I opened it up: https://pasteboard.co/K4zyTX2.jpg Not too good :D
Thanks in advance!
Greetings
Lucas
Please upload photos to the Beoworld server and insert them in your post rather than posting a link to an external server.It makes for much less cluttered reading and makes preserving information much easier.
Martin
You are in for quite a project! I would start by taking a look at Beogram 4002/4004 Restoration. He provides a wealth of info that you are going to need.
Mark