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Thread: Marantz cd changer great sound but skips |
   
New member Username: Arturixtl
Post Number: 3 Registered: Jan-05
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| Posted on Monday, January 24, 2005 - 04:04 pm: |
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Hi: I have an early 90s marantz cd changer--super warm sound..has digital out, but sometimes it skips. tried disk cleaner--no avail; any other tips...i want to hang on because the sound is so warm and precise compared to new "tinny" stuff today unless you pay big money; so hope there is an adjustment i can do...? any advice.. --thanks |
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Silver Member Username: Varney
Birmingham England, UK
Post Number: 259 Registered: Sep-04
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| Posted on Monday, January 24, 2005 - 09:51 pm: |
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Try furniture polish on the label side of the disc.... Yes - you heard me right - ON THE LABEL SIDE! All this does is reduce the static build up which gets worse as the disc reaches speed on spin-up. The polish has an antistatic agent, but a waxy finish, which is why you don't want to spray it on the playing side. The static on the discs can play havoc with the internal circuitry. Furniture polish is cheap next to 'anti-stat' sprays and just as good. Then give it a wipe with a clean, soft duster. To clean the playing side, wash in warm (not boiling hot) water with a good blob of ordinary detergent, making sure there is no traces of the soap when you've finished. Use your fingers, not any kind of abrasive cloth or sponge. Allow to air dry - THEN do the wax polish thing on the other side. Hope this helps. If not, then at least your 'test' CD will smell nice. If it doesn't work, you'll most likely need to remove the cover and clean the read lens. Calotherm spectacle cloth is about the best. Use a brand new one. V |
   
Silver Member Username: Varney
Birmingham England, UK
Post Number: 260 Registered: Sep-04
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| Posted on Monday, January 24, 2005 - 09:55 pm: |
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Oh, and you can also polish spray + wipe the plastic tray of the inside and outside of the changer drawer on the Marantz for good measure. Don't spray it directly into the machine though.... spray a little onto the cloth first and wipe over. V |
   
Silver Member Username: Varney
Birmingham England, UK
Post Number: 261 Registered: Sep-04
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| Posted on Monday, January 24, 2005 - 09:57 pm: |
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Let us know if it works for you, eh? V |
   
New member Username: Arturixtl
Post Number: 4 Registered: Jan-05
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| Posted on Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - 12:19 am: |
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Wow: just tried it; so far so good but if does not work; how do you clean the read lens? is the lens below the arm that pulls cd into engage on the carousel. i pull the chassis off and then where do i clean? I live in colorado, very dry, lots of static. thanks for tip. |
   
Silver Member Username: Varney
Birmingham England, UK
Post Number: 266 Registered: Sep-04
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| Posted on Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - 11:49 am: |
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Hi, Where the lens is, depends on the player, but generally is visible when you start removng the casings. If you'e not confident about the dismantling. get a professional to do it for you. For an old 'faithful', beloved machine, I'd say it'd be worth the money, if he's a reasonably priced fellow. There is another thing which causes skipping like Billy-O; although the failure rate to play the disc is much higher, you might have complained earlier.... The tracks upon which the read-lens assembly runs get dirty. This is what happened to my Technics SL-P550. The dirt was stopping the assembly from travelling forward smoothly, causing jumping and skipping on every single disc used. If you see the lens, you'll know it. Bright, clear little 'stone' set into an assembly which runs on a track. Be careful with it. Try cleaning the tracks, too with methylated spirit. Use Calotherm cloth on the lens only. Like I say - make sure you feel confident about any dismantling before you proceed. It'd be terrible to find yourself with a machine you could not put back together. Changer-mechanisms do make the whole plan a little more complicated than a single caddy machine. V |
   
Bronze Member Username: Ca_convert
Cardiff UK
Post Number: 58 Registered: Jan-05
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| Posted on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 - 03:09 pm: |
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You can also try a CD lens cleaner - they should be available even from a reasonably sized department store. They are simply a CD with a small "brush" that wipes over the lens as its "playing". Its played as a conventional CD (rather like a cassette tape head cleaner) |
   
Silver Member Username: Varney
Birmingham England, UK
Post Number: 281 Registered: Sep-04
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| Posted on Friday, January 28, 2005 - 11:42 pm: |
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But do they work? If they are anything like tape head cleaning cassettes.... V |
   
Unregistered guest |
| Posted on Monday, March 07, 2005 - 10:08 am: |
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Thank for the January tip on CD's. I rented a DVD but it was not playable - I followed your advice about washing the CD with a mild detergent in warm water and spraying furniture polish on the label side - IT WORKS GREAT! Thanks for the advice. |