Boombox Cleaning & Restoration Tips
olllie - 2013-07-17 23:33
Let me start off by saying I'm a complete newbie to all this. Impulsively bought a JVC RC-M70 from gumtree last night for £60 (was that a good deal?) and would like to restore it to its former glory. I don't have much knowledge of boomboxes.
Almost everything seems to work perfectly apart from DIN IN mode (LINE IN on some models?). I tried plugging in an mp3 player to the phono aux input using this mode but it sounds really quiet and distorted. Not sure if this is normal. Plugged in a turntable using PHONO mode and it sounded great. It's also missing one antenna but the other is perfect. The body is quite dirty and discolored and battery contacts have corrosion.
Can you recommend any techniques or products to make this thing shine?
Technically is there anything essential that I should be looking at to make sure its healthy?
Thanks in advance. This could be the first of many restoration projects!
Ollie
northerner - 2013-07-18 00:49
northerner - 2013-07-18 00:51
olllie - 2013-07-18 04:22
Thanks for the tips! Planning to take it completely apart over the weekend and give the casing a bath. I've heard Stardrops is a good detergent. I will also take your advise on the Servisol whilst I'm at it.
For the phono I ordered one of these yesterday: http://www.juno.co.uk/products...converter/432333-01/
How easy is it to replace battery contacts? The springs look OK but the contacts on the other side don't look great.
I'll be sure to take photos before and after.
northerner - 2013-07-18 05:08
Good choice!...a proper bath is always the way to go imo, there's nothing better than getting a really grubby looking box properly cleaned of 30 years of grime and shining like new again...well worth the effort
That phono box is spot on.
If the springs are good then thats good as the flat parts are usually easier to replace and more likely to clean up easily with a bit of sandpaper or a file. Can't remember how the contacts are set up in the M70 but I'd file the things before deciding what to do as some are dead easy to replace and some aren't so easy...when you take it apart you'll know....at the end of the day they're hidden so as long as they make a good contact with the battery its not so important what they look like.