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Vir Campestris May 5th 15 08:11 PM

CD Player advice
 
All uk.tech.broadcast denizens can stop reading now ;)

Our CD player has died. Suggestions please on how much to pay to get a
replacement. It was a Philips CD373, and to be honest it doesn't we us
anything - it's been around a good long while. I suspect the laser has
died, as it went from perfect to "I see no disc" in an instant.

I'm not into gold plated unidirectional silver mains cables, but I want
something that works decently. Bearing in mind that everything but the
DAC ought to cost about 15 quid it shouldn't be hundreds... but I'll
take advice.

Andy

Arfa Daily May 7th 15 02:19 PM

CD Player advice
 


"Vir Campestris" wrote in message
...
All uk.tech.broadcast denizens can stop reading now ;)

Our CD player has died. Suggestions please on how much to pay to get a
replacement. It was a Philips CD373, and to be honest it doesn't owe us
anything - it's been around a good long while. I suspect the laser has
died, as it went from perfect to "I see no disc" in an instant.


I would have said not. It is very unusual for lasers to 'just die'. They
almost always grow old gracefully, and will give assorted symptoms such as
poor playability, skipping, or extreme sensitivity to vibration, long before
they get to the point of declaring "NO DISC". Before finally condemning it,
I would open it up and make sure at least that the lens is clean, and that a
disc fully loads onto the turntable, and is free to rotate when it's there.
I have seen many simple mechanical problems on various Philips models over
many years of repairing them going right back to when CD first came out.
Philips lasers, although they *do* of course fail or wear out sometimes,
tend to be one of the more reliable makes.


Arfa


Andy


Woody[_4_] May 7th 15 03:37 PM

CD Player advice
 

"Arfa Daily" wrote in message
...


"Vir Campestris" wrote in message
...
All uk.tech.broadcast denizens can stop reading now ;)

Our CD player has died. Suggestions please on how much to pay to
get a replacement. It was a Philips CD373, and to be honest it
doesn't owe us anything - it's been around a good long while. I
suspect the laser has died, as it went from perfect to "I see no
disc" in an instant.


I would have said not. It is very unusual for lasers to 'just die'.
They almost always grow old gracefully, and will give assorted
symptoms such as poor playability, skipping, or extreme sensitivity
to vibration, long before they get to the point of declaring "NO
DISC". Before finally condemning it, I would open it up and make
sure at least that the lens is clean, and that a disc fully loads
onto the turntable, and is free to rotate when it's there. I have
seen many simple mechanical problems on various Philips models over
many years of repairing them going right back to when CD first came
out. Philips lasers, although they *do* of course fail or wear out
sometimes, tend to be one of the more reliable makes.


Arfa



+1


--
Woody

harrogate3 at ntlworld dot com




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