Kev, “Oh dear” is about right. Another word came to mind, but that is not for print.
I looked for anything obviously amiss and didn’t find anything.
So I took the aluminium control panels off and sanded the four contacts on both sides, then bent them slightly to reduce the travel before a connection is made. This should help with the fast forward and fast reverse problem.
I also straightened out the arm drive shaft that was slightly bent. Thanks Derek for the easy fix suggestion. It worked beautifully.
I then located the fuses and as expected one was REALLY blown. I didn’t expect that the fuse box case would be broken, but a little super-glue and that is also repaired. Oh this Beogram 4000 has had a TOUGH life!
I spend the better part of the afternoon in search of the fuse, with no luck. As such, I have no idea where I am with this problem.
The BIG question is why did the fuse blow in the first place? Anyone have any ideas?
The Beogram gave little hint that anything was greatly wrong other than skipping tracks, which I took for a needed adjustment. Then there was the sound that wasn’t quit right, but not truly distorted, just off a bit. Normally the sound quality is extraordinary.
Then the Beogram just stopped…. with the blown fuse as the immediate case.
Would failing caps cause this sort of issue and if not, what? Or could I just have an old fuse that packed it in? The previous owner spend nearly $400 replacing all the caps, so I rather doubt that is the problem, but you never know.
A lot of questions and I hope that someone has some ideas.
Jeff