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submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by iturnedintoanewt@lemmy.world to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

Hi guys!

So I'd like to surprise my mom and fix her old stereo which she no longer uses, due to it being making all sort of crackling noises, and no longer having a very large LPs collection. It was a nice one and she's fond of it. It's an old Scott 440A, and it has hooked both an LP player and a radio. It did have a tape player recorder, but I think that eventually got broken and thrown out. My solution would need two steps:

-I need to clean the amp potentiometers, specially the volume one, makes really loud cracks when moved. I have no idea how to do this! Is there any guide or youtube video showing how to do it?

-I'd like to buy a bluetooth DAC/CD player combo, so she can turn the AUX input and use it to play either CDs or music from the phone or the laptop in the bluetooth mode. She does have a cheap CD player connected to it, and I hooked also a cheap bluetooth DAC to the CD player external input, but the whole thing is a mess. She needs to remember to go aux, then choose the external input in the CD, then turn on the crappy USB bluetooth dongle thingy. I'd like a better looking single unit that does both BT and CD if needed. Is there such thing? Any recommendations?

Thanks a lot!

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[-] 0_0j@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

An old stereo like that is also going to need new capacitors.

This. As capacitors dielectic fluids deteriorate over time.

With Shematics in hand, open up that stereo system. With a thin plastic/dry wooden stick (thickness of straw), gently knock on all caps while stereo is playing. You will find the culprit cap(s).

It is recommended that you replace all electrolytic capacitors, but more time and energy. Throw it on "future projects" basket.

Caution:

⚠️ Risk of electric shock ⚠️

****** BE CAREFUL *******

  • wear shoes (utility boots, eg. CAT boots)
  • wear gloves (a dry-cloth glove at least on hand that will hold the stick)
  • put the stereo unit on a table where you can stand while you test it. Make sure there's nothing behind you, in case you need to abruptly fall down. 'Cause accidents happen.
  • bonus: have plastic lamina paper cover areas where grid power gets stepped down to prevent accidental touch. 'cause, for most well-made devices, grid power is handled on a separate PCB board. You will clearly see it (huge capacitors and a big fat transformer)
this post was submitted on 23 Oct 2025
24 points (100.0% liked)

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