Now I know what you're all thinking... work those switches, break down oxide! Unfortunately, after trying that and more, I'm out of options.
Allow me to give some background:
I purchased this projector about 5 years ago and the seller said it was "serviced." Not really sure what was done, but I was just happy it worked. After a few months, the sound would cut out occasionally. Finally it totally stopped. After some light digging, I found posts on the old forum explaining the situation and what to do. Sure enough, I pressed the big red record key a few times, and the sound returned!
...only to stop again a few weeks later. Could it be more oxide buildup? Who knows! I've never gotten the sound to work again
So far I've:
-Jiggled the record key a few hundred times
-Stuck a 3.5mm jack into all the aux/mic sockets rapidly to try and break up anything in there
-Lightly sprayed DeoxIT D5 into the sockets and tried again
-Did some disassembly to get as close as I could to the spring switch that the record key is connected to. I don't exactly know electrically what is happening inside that switch, but I did my best to spray DeoxIT D5 directly into it and work the record key up and down another few dozen times.
No dice!
Hopefully someone has another recommendation or tip to try. A service manual would be great as well-- I found PDFs for the 600 and 1200, but the mechanisms aren't exactly the same.
Thank you!
-Tyler
Edit: Also worth noting that there is an audible pop when the volume is turned on and off, as well as light speaker hum when it's cranked all the way up, so there's definitely power running into the speaker.
Allow me to give some background:
I purchased this projector about 5 years ago and the seller said it was "serviced." Not really sure what was done, but I was just happy it worked. After a few months, the sound would cut out occasionally. Finally it totally stopped. After some light digging, I found posts on the old forum explaining the situation and what to do. Sure enough, I pressed the big red record key a few times, and the sound returned!
...only to stop again a few weeks later. Could it be more oxide buildup? Who knows! I've never gotten the sound to work again
So far I've:
-Jiggled the record key a few hundred times
-Stuck a 3.5mm jack into all the aux/mic sockets rapidly to try and break up anything in there
-Lightly sprayed DeoxIT D5 into the sockets and tried again
-Did some disassembly to get as close as I could to the spring switch that the record key is connected to. I don't exactly know electrically what is happening inside that switch, but I did my best to spray DeoxIT D5 directly into it and work the record key up and down another few dozen times.
No dice!
Hopefully someone has another recommendation or tip to try. A service manual would be great as well-- I found PDFs for the 600 and 1200, but the mechanisms aren't exactly the same.
Thank you!
-Tyler
Edit: Also worth noting that there is an audible pop when the volume is turned on and off, as well as light speaker hum when it's cranked all the way up, so there's definitely power running into the speaker.
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