by GP49 »
Sat Nov 30, 2013 7:28 am
Here it is, exactly four months after the last post.
I hope you have taken the advice and are not still using that Dual. The following has probably happened:
The main control lever, that among other things turns the motor on and off, is stuck. The motor is not turning
off. Because the motor has been running continuously without a chance to cool down for who knows how long,
its bearings are dried out and that is what caused the continuous squeaking.
This does the motor no good. In fact after a while the motor shaft and the oilite bearing sleeves will be worn
and scored; the motor will be ruined, which is a shame because once the squeaking starts, it is not too late
to cure it and save the motor by properly servicing it.
Meanwhile, that main control lever needs to come out and its pivot cleaned of old, dried-out Dual grease,
and relubricated. Other mechanical pivot points probably need the same treatment. By the way, check out
the speed change control. It is probably frozen in the 33 position, again due to dried-out Dual grease. If
you force it, you will break the speed change mechanism. So don't.
All this doesn't even mention the problem that eventually afflicts ALL Duals in the 12-series: the steuerpimpel.
It is a tiny rubbery pip on the end of a spring-loaded shaft, that acts as a slipclutch for the tonearm mechanism.
Dual's discriminating German "engineers" made a poor materials choice for this part. Like all things rubber, it
deteriorates. A Dual whose tonearm sets down short of the record, or that picks up the arm at the end of the
side, only to have the next record in the stack fall onto it, most likely has a bad or missing steuerpimpel.
A Dual 1229 can be a superb high-end record changer. But with those and other problems such as the "jack"
that adjusts the height of the tonearm gimbal unaddressed, and the controls forced in an attempt to free
things up and make it work, it will turn into a pile of junk.