Merry Christmas to ME.

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Superduper

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Found on marketplace, not free, paid $125 amid a flurry of interested buyers which spans a line longer than Best Buy on a Black Friday offering $1 iPads. Our family agreed no gift exchange this year for our get together to avoid adding to the heaps of useless gifts clutter gathering in every corner of our homes. So I got this for myself. I quite like the matching setup and the fluorescent display. It’s like Christmas tree lighting except on a stereo.

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Superduper

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Ooh....bet that's quality
The cabinets are metal so the wood grain is merely painted on but they’re immaculate. Also most tuners are really light things but this guy has some real heft, and definitely feels like quality. Also most digital tuners only have an up/down buttons for tuning which this guy has but it also has a tuning knob too. This deal isn’t going to have power like from a monster receiver of the era, but you wouldn’t want or need that type of power in a bedroom, office etc where this setup seems perfect for. Plenty enough power, I only listened to it at 1-1.5 on volume scale during the audition, and that’s probably normal listening level for me.
 

BoomboxLover48

Boomus Fidelis
I see an AKAI GX F33 auto rev deck there.
I have the AKAI CS F 33R and GX F-66R auto rev decks in my collection besides several Akai decks like GXC 570D, GXC 730D, 760D and so on....
 

Superduper

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Staff member
I see an AKAI GX F33 auto rev deck there....

It's actually the GX-F35, not the F33R. My deck lacks the auto reverse feature, but does have some features that aren't on the 33R such as programmable music search, an additional tape-type setting, peak VU setting and apparently a Super GX head (not sure if that's better). Regardless, I have many much higher spec'd tape decks but honestly, it doesn't matter. I don't really do tapes, prefer the random accessibility of CDs, the lack of pops etc are a definite bonus. I just like how the whole system looks together. Maybe I need to hunt for the DT-100 timer that Caution mentioned too. :hmmm:
 
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Superduper

Moderator
Staff member
THEY REALLY DON'T WANT YOU TO SERVICE THESE THINGS.

The tape deck played, but wouldn't FF or RW. Before I put the stack on the shelf, I thought maybe I'd see if I can fix this issue really quick. I just don't like things that have glaring deficiencies. Well, quick wasn't exactly the word. AT first glance, it looked like the deck should come out cleanly. Nope. Everything ties together, one brick at a time. You can't just pluck one out the middle. Top cabinet, bottom panel, front panel. Power switch was behind the deck but switch button was in front of the deck. What did Akai do? They put a snaking lever that goes through the deck of course. Now you just need to juggle the 2# deck while trying to dislatch the lever from the fragile switch shaft. Eventually all of the steel structure and brackets needs to be slowly dismantled so that all you're left with is this limp noodle mess. Why is limp noodle important? Because everything is still tied together including the transformer and power supply with huge bundles of soldered wires, nope no wimpy interconnects here, that would be too easy. So you can't easily turn the assembly on the side or over anymore without risking breaking the PCB in half or how about all the fragile sensors, the hanging florescent display, etc. Then there's the deck. Turns out that the main play belt was old, loose but suprisingly still operating. I changed it for good measure. But the reason that the FF/RW didn't work is because of an idler tire that has turned to hard plastic. Could find something that might work on eBay, for like $20 for 4, and it would take 2 weeks. If there's one thing I know, if I don't put it back together NOW, I won't ever be able to find everything or remember how it all goes back together. So I found my o-ring kit, and found one that fits. Yeah, not perfect, but it can't be worse than that plastic ring. Then in order to access it, more disassembly since that portion is sandwiched in the middle of the deck necessitating removing layers. In the process, I found a ball bearing on the floor. What? Where'd that come from. So I look and look and look. Now, another one magically appears. Basically, when you disassemble it that far, things start falling out. Thank God for the service manual with barely readable exploded schematics. In the end, it is all working now, O-ring tire works fine. But I really wanna ask. Akai: Really? I'm not a rocket scientist, or a mechanical engineer, or anything special. But even I can see many different design changes that would make this process 100x better for maintenance or repair. I can only conclude: They really don't want you to service these things.

akai_gx-f35_disassembly.jpg
 

BoomboxLover48

Boomus Fidelis
I have so many AKAI decks in my collection and most of them are so hard to work on the mechanical section. The best part I love is the brushless motor in some of them which is whisper quiet and durable. GXC 570D, 730D all have those brushless type motors. GXC 570 and GXC 735 is Sensi touch operation. You just feel the transport switch with your finger and that activates it.
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Radio raheem

Requiem Æternam
i bough his Norm lad can already tell deck will need belts more porky pies from the seller to late though as my mate already bought her.....posted here as it seems an apt thread,.....the best things really are the ones bought by our selves .congrats on the akai lad my kind of system :beer2:

JVC PC-55 Stereo Compo System - September 2023 (4).jpg
 
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floyd

Boomus Fidelis
THEY REALLY DON'T WANT YOU TO SERVICE THESE THINGS.

The tape deck played, but wouldn't FF or RW. Before I put the stack on the shelf, I thought maybe I'd see if I can fix this issue really quick. I just don't like things that have glaring deficiencies. Well, quick wasn't exactly the word. AT first glance, it looked like the deck should come out cleanly. Nope. Everything ties together, one brick at a time. You can't just pluck one out the middle. Top cabinet, bottom panel, front panel. Power switch was behind the deck but switch button was in front of the deck. What did Akai do? They put a snaking lever that goes through the deck of course. Now you just need to juggle the 2# deck while trying to dislatch the lever from the fragile switch shaft. Eventually all of the steel structure and brackets needs to be slowly dismantled so that all you're left with is this limp noodle mess. Why is limp noodle important? Because everything is still tied together including the transformer and power supply with huge bundles of soldered wires, nope no wimpy interconnects here, that would be too easy. So you can't easily turn the assembly on the side or over anymore without risking breaking the PCB in half or how about all the fragile sensors, the hanging florescent display, etc. Then there's the deck. Turns out that the main play belt was old, loose but suprisingly still operating. I changed it for good measure. But the reason that the FF/RW didn't work is because of an idler tire that has turned to hard plastic. Could find something that might work on eBay, for like $20 for 4, and it would take 2 weeks. If there's one thing I know, if I don't put it back together NOW, I won't ever be able to find everything or remember how it all goes back together. So I found my o-ring kit, and found one that fits. Yeah, not perfect, but it can't be worse than that plastic ring. Then in order to access it, more disassembly since that portion is sandwiched in the middle of the deck necessitating removing layers. In the process, I found a ball bearing on the floor. What? Where'd that come from. So I look and look and look. Now, another one magically appears. Basically, when you disassemble it that far, things start falling out. Thank God for the service manual with barely readable exploded schematics. In the end, it is all working now, O-ring tire works fine. But I really wanna ask. Akai: Really? I'm not a rocket scientist, or a mechanical engineer, or anything special. But even I can see many different design changes that would make this process 100x better for maintenance or repair. I can only conclude: They really don't want you to service these things.

View attachment 57972
This is exactly what happens anytime I work on a JVC compo box.
Then halfway into it I find something broken or burnt up and like damn I'm not even putting this s*** back together. But then there's so many damn Parts you almost have to put it back together.
 

floyd

Boomus Fidelis
i bough his Norm lad can already tell deck will need belts more porky pies from the seller to late though as my mate already bought her.....posted here as it seems an apt thread,.....the best things really are the ones bought by our selves .congrats on the akai lad my kind of system :beer2:

View attachment 57975

You know it's a heavy Boombox if it has a detachable handle.
 
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smeltedcheese

Member (SA)
Superduper said:

"If there's one thing I know, if I don't put it back together NOW, I won't ever be able to find everything or remember how it all goes back together."

Amen. The first commandment of boombox repair for me.
 
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