by Rob-NYC »
Fri Aug 21, 2015 11:12 pm
This was covered earlier in the topic thread. The upper crank which is located under the carousel had slipped out of the retaining notch that hold it in sync with the lower crank,
The easiest was to reengage them is to hold the lower crank steady while turning the carouse --clockwise--. Looking at this pic:
http://s1192.photobucket.com/user/Rob-N ... rt=2&o=161 you see a small ramp in the bottom of the casting that leads up to a slot. The upper crank pin is spring loaded and will snap into that notch.
As I understood it, the European Lyric was made mostly from mechanism parts shipped there after the closure of the American factory in Tonawanda (did I spell that correctly?). From pic's I have seen the European version was somewhat modded electrically in that the motors were all line voltage and not powered by the transformer in the amp. That meant 220 VAC on the mech switches.
The amp was much simpler with lower power output and no AGC. The lack of AGC was less of an issue in that 45's in Europe all had pretty uniform output level and that was set via a typical Telefunken limiter. They also used good vinyl.
Personal opinion: The American carousel was far superior to the German mech that Deutsche Wurlitzer developed and use here from 3400-on. The later mech had a better tonearm and looked more 'refined" but there was far too much plastic and excessive complication for the kind of rugged use 9and neglect) that a typical jukebox gets.
Rob/NYC
"If we believe absurdities, we shall commit atrocities" -- Voltaire