Here we go again, Rudey. First that other website and now this website ...Hisrudeness said:I thought this might happen.
I certainly erupted in (nervous) laughter, JimmyJimmy! There you go again, flustering me on BoomBoxery.com! And -- HUGE WINK -- by "POS" you do mean "Pretty Ol' Stereo" ... right?jimmyjimmy19702010 said:It's a mid sized one piece tone box - the easiest type of box on this earth to work on. Enough of the endless posts, just crack that POS open and have a go!![]()
Do indulge me some more, sir. (Hopeful blinking)Fatdog said:Yeah, this is becoming ridiculous.![]()
I saw this coming from 2000 miles away, waay in the beginning. My 2nd and last presence here (I think my last post about said it all; nothing since has changed, in fact, everything I've seen since just reinforces what I originally gut feeling.).Hisrudeness said:I thought this might happen.
If anyone thinks that a zebra can change their stripes, think again...jimmyjimmy19702010 said:It's a mid sized one piece tone box - the easiest type of box on this earth to work on. Enough of the endless posts, just crack that POS open and have a go!![]()
Yes sir! Anything else master?PostEnder said:Sure hope that someone out there will be prompt with a helping hand, so to speak, if I run into problems ...
Ever think that maybe the issue might be YOU and not everyone else?PostEnder said:Here we go again, Rudey. First that other website and now this website ...
Again, I suggest you look inward rather than outward for your "troubles." I can see it now, endless badgering and suggestions to the shop that the item, even as it is tested right before your very eyes that it is repaired did not satisfy you that it was "truly" fixed until the owner finally relented, hands clasped around his face, in frustration until he tells you.... "go... just take the blasted thing... get out of here...." At that point, you, smirking, inwardly thinking "Yes! Victory" sheepishly gathered up your boomboxes and left the place having shafted the shop not once, but twice. And you wonder why they refused to look at your third boombox. Me thinks it's not boomboxes that they are afraid of, but rather what is attached to the handle when the boomboxes was brought in for service. But to comment on your comment above.... Yes, live with the snafu; Yes, give the machine away, No, do not look inside it as I don't think we can handle the rest of the process of rebelting this simple machine, and No, don't look inside of it since I don't think anyone here will want the liability of encouraging you to get your azz fried by probing something you shouldn't be, even though frankly, I "think" that the real M.O. here is that you simply want to keep playing this charade until you find a knight (dodo) in shining armor to come and save your boombox (for free, of course). Now, I might be way off base here, and 180 degree wrong, but I believe in my gut and it's served me well, and nothing I've seen here since the very first post has done anything but reinforce it.PostEnder said:To Confess (Again): I shamefully failed to pay the well-regarded electronics-repair shop for the hours the experts spent working on two other portables of mine: a JVC RC-M50JW and a Helix HX-4633N. My excuse was my persistently suspecting that strange -- indeed, supernatural -- glitches would befall those other stereos' tape decks even after they were repaired. My shirking my customer obligations was likely part of what moved the repair-shop personnel to disavow any more repairing of boomboxes.
So ...: I either get the Aiwa repaired somehow or I live with the snafu or I give the machine away.
I have to pull those good-looking, good-feeling, chromed knobs off the facade (front) of the Aiwa? They can't stay on while I access the interior? I checked the controls -- especially, of course, the knobs -- minutes ago. None of them have a tiny screw or the like to fasten them to their respective posts (stems) for usage. Does one have to actually pull (slide) them off the steel stems? Oh, boy ...jimmyjimmy19702010 said:So as you would know, the front panel will come off taking the deck door/speakers etc with it. After you have removed the screws and knobs etc, you then need to open the deck door and the front panel should come free.
Take it easy, Superduper. This is still my first attempt at opening and directly peering into a boombox -- as opposed to vicariously gazing at the images of those machines' electromechanical intricacies that far more confident people post on websites during the repair process.Superduper said:I saw this coming from 2000 miles away, waay in the beginning. My 2nd and last presence here (I think my last post about said it all; nothing since has changed, in fact, everything I've seen since just reinforces what I originally gut feeling.).
If anyone thinks that a zebra can change their stripes, think again...
Yes sir! Anything else master?
Ever think that maybe the issue might be YOU and not everyone else?
Again, I suggest you look inward rather than outward for your "troubles." I can see it now, endless badgering and suggestions to the shop that the item, even as it is tested right before your very eyes that it is repaired did not satisfy you that it was "truly" fixed until the owner finally relented, hands clasped around his face, in frustration until he tells you.... "go... just take the blasted thing... get out of here...." At that point, you, smirking, inwardly thinking "Yes! Victory" sheepishly gathered up your boomboxes and left the place having shafted the shop not once, but twice. And you wonder why they refused to look at your third boombox. Me thinks it's not boomboxes that they are afraid of, but rather what is attached to the handle when the boomboxes was brought in for service. But to comment on your comment above.... Yes, live with the snafu; Yes, give the machine away, No, do not look inside it as I don't think we can handle the rest of the process of rebelting this simple machine, and No, don't look inside of it since I don't think anyone here will want the liability of encouraging you to get your azz fried by probing something you shouldn't be, even though frankly, I "think" that the real M.O. here is that you simply want to keep playing this charade until you find a knight (dodo) in shining armor to come and save your boombox (for free, of course). Now, I might be way off base here, and 180 degree wrong, but I believe in my gut and it's served me well, and nothing I've seen here since the very first post has done anything but reinforce it.
Ok, this is all very harsh, but I'm the guy that says exactly what's on my mind but don't think I can't temper my responses because this is the tempered version. The other version is..... well, let's not go there.
Here's the problem, 31 posts, all on this thread and you've not yet even removed the knobs or unfastened a screw. To most of us, this is such a easy box to rebelt (comparatively speaking) that by the time you get to the flywheel backing plate screw, you will be 300 posts into this and this will be trying the patience of even the most patient of us. And admittedly, I am probably the least patient of the folks here so I am totally useless to you. The truth is that classic boomboxes almost all require fairly regular maintenance to perform at their best, whether it is rebelting or regular deoxidizing of controls. At this rate, by the time you get through rebelting your M9998 or TPR-990, you will likely have accumulated more posts than Ira the legend himself.PostEnder said:But I'm gaining nothing by resenting anyone for chastising me on this website. The Aiwa still needs fixing -- which apparently involves yanking knobs off the front to open up the back. (Sigh)