My brother-in-law is 50 in December and years ago I mentioned to my sister that I would source a turntable system for his birthday as he was using a horrible plastic faux Dansette type player.......
So - I managed to source an L78 in a Dynatron chassis with built-in amp and inputs for a tape player and radio for the cost of picking it up about 6 months ago :angel:
Got it home and the v-blocks were perished but the basics seemed to be there so plonked it in the garage ready to look at it some time soon.
Time flies by and before you know it December is just around the corner so I thought I need to pull my finger out.
I bought some v-blocks last year and put them somewhere safe - can I find them...... nope
Werner on from the Lenco Heaven forum (Wer) came to the rescue and had a pair of the cheap Chinese ones that he was willing to give to me and get the TT up and running until I can find the good v-blocks - still looking.
The other week I pulled it out from the garage and gave it a good clean and went to town with the computer service spray on the switches and the circuit boards after I had powered it up and the volume control was very noisy.
A few pictures of the interior:
As mentioned above, replaced the v-blocks with the Chinese ones and heres a few pics:
Also re-did the bearing with a new ball bearing and thrust pad plus fresh oil.
Pulled the motor out and gave that a quick service to - ran very smooth and silent!
Connected to my speakers and plugged into the mains then power applied - moving the volume, balance and other buttons and all good regarding crackles and pops coming through the speakers (or not as was the case).
Put a record on and it sounded good for about 5 seconds then the sound went all mushy. Lifted the arm up and put it down and again, sounded good for about 5 seconds. It still had the original cartridge in so not surprised.
From the pics can anyone tell me what it is (I know it's a Goldring one) and worth saving?
Removed the offending cartridge and replaced it with a spare A&R P77 I had and had another go of playing the record.
It sounded very good indeed
I had an old DIN to 4 RCA socket cables which used to be connected to an old tape deck so pulled out my old but trusted CD player and connected it to the tape DIN socket and it worked with a very nice sound.
A nice sounding deck. Put the lid back on and just need to get another cartridge (unless the Goldring just needs a new stylus - if you can still get them) and sort out some speakers and jobs a good un'
Thanks for looking