Hi Ron,
I have bought your SEEBURG Mech Book (It's great: Thanks for all the work, also your granddaughter), but I still have a question:
My V200D Box works All Right (when the arm is on the left side): selects, plays, rejects, scans etc. OK.
However, if it has to select the other side of the singles (arm at the right hand side), the table moves approx 3/4 cm. to the left (due to axial play) and would ruin the needle because the record hits it when putting on the table.
When I gently force the table to the right whilst selecting the right sides of the singles (taking out the axial play of the turntable), everything works OK.
The cause is therefore too much axial play in the turntable shaft: it almost looks as if the steel washers (item 13), were omitted during the conversion (see below).
But if I take this axial play away, by adjusting the screw at the right side of the turntable, the box neither works well left of right, : single rubs against the record magazine.
Do I have to remove the axial play as per the book with the adjustment screw, and then adjust the single rack?
Can you please advise how? Is it as per the Seeburg manual page 2317: Tormat Memory Unit Position".
2nd question:
2 screws plus bent washers of the record table (position 25 and 23) on page 2355, 245ST1-L6 MECH, are missing.
However, the table is stuck on the ball bearings (if I look at the drawing, I think it should be able to move from the bearings? Is this indeed so? At present pulling on the table moves the entire shaft. I do not to want to force something, if I do not understand how it is supposed to be dismantled.
I have bought 2 screws (25) plus tabs (23). Where do these tabs locate behind? (Are they intended to fix the ball bearings into the table.
I intend to install these screws+ tabs before carrying out any furher adjustments,
I think all of the above is a legacy of the past: the box was converted in the early 1960's to 50C/S operation (by intalling a different Fibre gear: this was apparently not done very neatly!
A lot of questions, but I hope you could give me a few tips.
Thanks & All the Best!
Martin Bosma, Netherlands