We work on amps all the time, but some of my customers use other things. DJs use CD players, and so do exercise programs. I have more aerobics instructors coming to me than you might think. They use these things to death. You can buy a perfectly good new CD payer for under $30 with a warranty even. But they buy nicer ones that have a pitch/speed control. They can adjust the speed of the music to fit the planned activity.
I do a little consumer electronics repair, just as a courtesy to the community. No TVs or computers, thank you, just audio. But mainly I do semi-pro stuff. GJ dual players with remote control panel or TASCAM stand alone units.
I hate to turn away these customers, I may not like the CD player, but it establishes the relationship, so when they need service on their amp/mixer/speakers, they come to me, not whoever they would have turned to in the first place.
Only so many things to fix in a CD player.
The optical laser pickup. In my experience, pretty much they need cleaning, they need replacement, or they work. Cleaning is simple. SOme 99% isopropyl and a Q-tip, gently wipe the lens. It is a tender little thinig, but so is your eyeball. If you can put in a contact lens, you can wipe a laser lens. SOmetimes you have to move the tray out of the way to get access.
If cleaning doesn;t restore operation, then a new laser is probably the cure. And now we are talking $$$. Lasers don;t come much cheaper than $30, and can get up to $100 or more. That is my cost. So retail to customer is $60-150, throw in an hour labor and they probably won;t go for the repair on a basic unit.
The laser assembly slides on greased rails with a geared motor driving it, mostly. Portables use a swing arm a lot, but we don;t fix those. If those rails get dirty or sticky, the player can skip. And if those gears get a bit of grit or some hair in the teeth, that can cause sticking and skipping. I know sometimes after I skip, I find hair in my teeth. SO if skipping, and we cleaned the lens, clean the rails and gears, then fresh thin coat of white lube.
I just HATE those 6 CD stack deals. They are a jam waiting to happen.
The tray has to move in and out, and raise the laser assembly to clamp in the disc. SOme drive direct, but most involve a little belt. If the belt loses tension or grip, then the motor can have a hard time moving the tray. A lot of times it can close the tray but the extra oomph to pull the laser up tight is more than it can handle. Belt slips Replace the little belt.
There will be litle tiny blade switches or tiny microswitches that sense tray position. They tell the controller when the tray is all the way out and all the way in or "home." If the tray switches don;t work, the tray can cycle in and out on its own, or refuse to stay open. If it can't sense home, it may not read the disc.
Once in a while, you have to resolder the dual RCA jacks on the rear.
And the controls. Whatever the buttons on the panel look like, chances are that under them are the very common 6mm square "tactile" button switches. They usually wear out the stop, play, tray in/out ones, and sometimes the others. You find buttons that just don;t work, or that you have to puch hard or that you have to kinds puash sideways. If a couple are bad, I just replace all 10 of them, they are cheap. Look at them closely, they come in two leg and four leg types, and watch the heighth. a 4.3mm and a 5mm tall switch look about the same, but that little difference can mean buttons that don;t quite reach or button that stay pushed when the panel is assembled.
I don't remember the last time I saw one with an actual electronics problem. If one audio channel is out, look for a bad op amp driving the output jack.
Really, ther is not a lot to servicing these, and if it makes a new customer, worth the effort.
I do a little consumer electronics repair, just as a courtesy to the community. No TVs or computers, thank you, just audio. But mainly I do semi-pro stuff. GJ dual players with remote control panel or TASCAM stand alone units.
I hate to turn away these customers, I may not like the CD player, but it establishes the relationship, so when they need service on their amp/mixer/speakers, they come to me, not whoever they would have turned to in the first place.
Only so many things to fix in a CD player.
The optical laser pickup. In my experience, pretty much they need cleaning, they need replacement, or they work. Cleaning is simple. SOme 99% isopropyl and a Q-tip, gently wipe the lens. It is a tender little thinig, but so is your eyeball. If you can put in a contact lens, you can wipe a laser lens. SOmetimes you have to move the tray out of the way to get access.
If cleaning doesn;t restore operation, then a new laser is probably the cure. And now we are talking $$$. Lasers don;t come much cheaper than $30, and can get up to $100 or more. That is my cost. So retail to customer is $60-150, throw in an hour labor and they probably won;t go for the repair on a basic unit.
The laser assembly slides on greased rails with a geared motor driving it, mostly. Portables use a swing arm a lot, but we don;t fix those. If those rails get dirty or sticky, the player can skip. And if those gears get a bit of grit or some hair in the teeth, that can cause sticking and skipping. I know sometimes after I skip, I find hair in my teeth. SO if skipping, and we cleaned the lens, clean the rails and gears, then fresh thin coat of white lube.
I just HATE those 6 CD stack deals. They are a jam waiting to happen.
The tray has to move in and out, and raise the laser assembly to clamp in the disc. SOme drive direct, but most involve a little belt. If the belt loses tension or grip, then the motor can have a hard time moving the tray. A lot of times it can close the tray but the extra oomph to pull the laser up tight is more than it can handle. Belt slips Replace the little belt.
There will be litle tiny blade switches or tiny microswitches that sense tray position. They tell the controller when the tray is all the way out and all the way in or "home." If the tray switches don;t work, the tray can cycle in and out on its own, or refuse to stay open. If it can't sense home, it may not read the disc.
Once in a while, you have to resolder the dual RCA jacks on the rear.
And the controls. Whatever the buttons on the panel look like, chances are that under them are the very common 6mm square "tactile" button switches. They usually wear out the stop, play, tray in/out ones, and sometimes the others. You find buttons that just don;t work, or that you have to puch hard or that you have to kinds puash sideways. If a couple are bad, I just replace all 10 of them, they are cheap. Look at them closely, they come in two leg and four leg types, and watch the heighth. a 4.3mm and a 5mm tall switch look about the same, but that little difference can mean buttons that don;t quite reach or button that stay pushed when the panel is assembled.
I don't remember the last time I saw one with an actual electronics problem. If one audio channel is out, look for a bad op amp driving the output jack.
Really, ther is not a lot to servicing these, and if it makes a new customer, worth the effort.
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