I'm currently looking at a few larger at home boomboxes to play with and maintain, and the three that I'm between right now are the Panasonic 5500, the 5350, and the National 5700.
Since there's fairly limited information on the 5700 online, I was curious if anyone has any experience with one and what they can tell me. What are some common faults, what can I expect from buying it, what does the boombox expect of me to keep it running, etc. I'm hoping to find something nice that'll last a some years with care and attention, but I'm sure with all old electronics, they're bound to irreparably die at some point.
I'm pretty good with a solder, but I still generally favor simpler mechanical boxes, hence why I avoid boomboxes with soft touch or anything other features that'll end up confusing me when I open it up to fix something. Mo wires mo problems. I'm pretty good with a solder, but I'm not really equipped or skilled enough to do any electrical maintenance besides replacing components on the PCB, the less time I have to spend identifying which parts to replace the better.
I'm hoping to find a box that's big, nice, durable, and I can mostly maintain with my skills and hopefully only needing to send to a professional or replace the box in a few years.
Since there's fairly limited information on the 5700 online, I was curious if anyone has any experience with one and what they can tell me. What are some common faults, what can I expect from buying it, what does the boombox expect of me to keep it running, etc. I'm hoping to find something nice that'll last a some years with care and attention, but I'm sure with all old electronics, they're bound to irreparably die at some point.
I'm pretty good with a solder, but I still generally favor simpler mechanical boxes, hence why I avoid boomboxes with soft touch or anything other features that'll end up confusing me when I open it up to fix something. Mo wires mo problems. I'm pretty good with a solder, but I'm not really equipped or skilled enough to do any electrical maintenance besides replacing components on the PCB, the less time I have to spend identifying which parts to replace the better.
I'm hoping to find a box that's big, nice, durable, and I can mostly maintain with my skills and hopefully only needing to send to a professional or replace the box in a few years.