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chartzBRONZE MemberBonjour,
Manuels bien reçus, avec les suppléments s’il vous plaît !
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chartzBRONZE MemberJ’ai donc pris le BM4400 et la BG4000. Merci Yann.
Ça va prendre du temps à scanner pour les déposer ici !
chartzBRONZE MemberSalut Yann !
Très intéressé.
Je cherche pour la Beogram 4000, entre autres.
chartzBRONZE MemberHello Steve,
My favourite one remains the Beolab 5000 amplifier. No contest. Then, the mighty Beomaster 8000.
chartzBRONZE MemberIn fact the small PCB in the Beogram sans phono board has the same notches. Just remove it to see!
chartzBRONZE MemberHi,
I don’t remember but you can find them by looking where it is supposed to be seated inside the Beogram, right?
chartzBRONZE MemberNow you can do it yourself ?
chartzBRONZE Member chartzBRONZE MemberI got mine from someone on the old forum who went by the username solderon29 – but that was 7 years ago so not sure if he’s active on the new site?
Yeah, I also got it from him.
chartzBRONZE MemberWelcome to Beoworld!
Nothing can be said from the pictures you display here. You really need a microscope, a good light source and some experience to do that. I use x20 magnification, more if I can’t decide. The worn surfaces are this tiny!
Listen to a distinct lack of high treble. A dull MMC is a worn one.
chartzBRONZE MemberÇa marche Yann.
chartzBRONZE MemberYup, the idler is definitely the culprit for this noise. The usual flat spot plus hardened rubber. Nothing to be done here, just have it redone by a competent company. All three have to be done, by the way.
Meanwhile, you can swap the noisier one with the one at right.
Never mind the belt, but yeah, it’ll need to be replaced too. It’s a bit loose.
chartzBRONZE MemberThe rattle is not normal. Just feel if the CD is clamped completely. When it starts turning, unplug the player and feel whether the CD has some play as regards to its platter.
chartzBRONZE MemberCheers ?
chartzBRONZE MemberFunny that I should still appear as a bronze member Guy, by the way ?
chartzBRONZE MemberLeave the large silver caps alone, and check the others that supply the different voltage rails.
chartzBRONZE MemberTwo things if the transformer gets hot:
– Is it 220 or 240?
– Check power supply caps. I had a 5500 with a nearly shorted one (Sony branded) that made the transformer thermal fuse melt.
This might eventually happen to yours.Leave the motors alone.
chartzBRONZE MemberI really enjoyed the museum tour. Almost like being there!
Thanks Steve ??
chartzBRONZE MemberHi,
It sounds as if something is rubbing. The rotation should be silent. Are you certain that the disc is properly clamped?
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