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ARCHIVED FORUM -- April 2007 to March 2012
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This is the first Archived Forum which was active between 17th April 2007 and
1st March February 2012
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In the same place you can find the type number and date of manufacture - on the label under the control panel.
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Contact member Dillen (Martin). He'll either have one, or can suggest a source for one.
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As far as I know they both use 7-pin DIN. Not 100% sure tho.
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Canada is 110V; same as USA.
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I had the exact same problem with my 8002. The consensus here was that capacitor replacement was in order. I sold the turntable as a parts unit, so I can't say for sure whether that was the cause. Here's the thread.
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My advice would be to first try cleaning the laser lens, either with a commercial CD lens cleaning disk or a Q-Tip dampened with rubbing alcohol. If this doesn't work the problem could be with a capacitor, or the laser might need replacing. Can't give you too much technical detail here. With regard to a service facility I can recommend Atlantic
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It's not one of the more desireable vintage turntables but you got a GREAT buy. The cartridge is worth over $100 by itself. And most would agree the TX is superior to the turntable that replaced it - the TX 2. Enjoy..
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They both have a red light when in standby mode only. Below is 2300, then 3200. Pretty much the same, as Llewelyn mentioned. The information that shows up is different however - e.g. the 3200 has RDS; the 2300 doesn't. (I knew there had to be a reason why I own so much B&O
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Stars: As for Daniel Craig, I still don't think he's the 'correct' Bond, but I enjoyed it nevertheless. Agreed, but perhaps not for the same reason. Based on his last performance his character wasn't very likeable. How are we supposed to root for Bond if we don't even like him? The quintessential Bond film will always be Goldfinger