by emily » Sat Jun 20, 2015 7:51 pm
by DoghouseRiley » Sat Jun 20, 2015 9:02 pm

by emily » Sat Jun 20, 2015 9:32 pm
by Ron Rich » Sat Jun 20, 2015 11:25 pm
by MattTech » Sun Jun 21, 2015 12:22 am
DoghouseRiley wrote:Hi and welcome to this very friendly board.
I've a Rock-Ola 443, which is the "baby" of the same model, being only 100 play. But to all intents and purposes they are otherwise the same model.
If it's any help this is what you should be seeing under the turntable. Ignore the mechanism for the disabled multi-speed option behind the jockey wheel.
The jockey wheel which has a rubber tyre (sorry, I'm English) rubs on the drive shaft and the inside of the turntable rim and is kept in tension by the spring you can see. The tyre on this wheel and the inside of the turntable rim, must be kept free from any grease.
The only grommets are the three that support the turntable motor. You can see these in the photo, they are the ones nearest to the motor spindle. These can deteriorate over time which can cause the motor to vibrate slightly which can be picked up by the cartridge resulting in an irritating background noise when a record is playing.
A new jockey wheel, (if that is your problem) and the grommets if ever they need replacing, can be easily and quite cheaply sourced from a jukebox spares supplier in the USA.
by DoghouseRiley » Sun Jun 21, 2015 1:13 am
MattTech wrote:DoghouseRiley wrote:Hi and welcome to this very friendly board.
I've a Rock-Ola 443, which is the "baby" of the same model, being only 100 play. But to all intents and purposes they are otherwise the same model.
If it's any help this is what you should be seeing under the turntable. Ignore the mechanism for the disabled multi-speed option behind the jockey wheel.
The jockey wheel which has a rubber tyre (sorry, I'm English) rubs on the drive shaft and the inside of the turntable rim and is kept in tension by the spring you can see. The tyre on this wheel and the inside of the turntable rim, must be kept free from any grease.
The only grommets are the three that support the turntable motor. You can see these in the photo, they are the ones nearest to the motor spindle. These can deteriorate over time which can cause the motor to vibrate slightly which can be picked up by the cartridge resulting in an irritating background noise when a record is playing.
A new jockey wheel, (if that is your problem) and the grommets if ever they need replacing, can be easily and quite cheaply sourced from a jukebox spares supplier in the USA.
Doggie, that photo of the drive mechanism - the "screw" you're using on that brass drive collar is way too long.
Being so will cause additional vibration and imbalance of the motor shaft - thus increasing chances of "flutter" in the sound.
Best to go with a flush type allen/hex screw of the proper thread to "smooth things out.
Your top motor bearing will love you for it.
by emily » Sun Jun 21, 2015 2:20 am
Ron Rich wrote:Hi Emily,
You do not need the part with the screw on it here in the USA. That's an adapter, for 50 Hertz use. You have a common problem--first check that all there of the motor support grommets are good. They should be a "white" color on RockOlas, and lift the motor high enough, as well as straight enough so the "Idler wheel" ( or, in that foreign lingo-- "jockey wheel"), makes solid contact with the shaft. The "tire" ( sorry again) portion must not be "glazed"--it must be soft enough to make contact with the clean rim of the turntable. The motor, linkage, Idler wheel POST, and the turntable should have a drop or two of 20 wt. ND oil on them. Note: If you can't get the idler wheel soft, it must be re-surfaced. Ron Rich
by MattTech » Sun Jun 21, 2015 6:58 am
emily wrote:Ron,
It looks like I have 1 bad grommet. Can you recommend a place to get a replacement? Thanks for your help!
-EmilyRon Rich wrote:Hi Emily,
You do not need the part with the screw on it here in the USA. That's an adapter, for 50 Hertz use. You have a common problem--first check that all there of the motor support grommets are good. They should be a "white" color on RockOlas, and lift the motor high enough, as well as straight enough so the "Idler wheel" ( or, in that foreign lingo-- "jockey wheel"), makes solid contact with the shaft. The "tire" ( sorry again) portion must not be "glazed"--it must be soft enough to make contact with the clean rim of the turntable. The motor, linkage, Idler wheel POST, and the turntable should have a drop or two of 20 wt. ND oil on them. Note: If you can't get the idler wheel soft, it must be re-surfaced. Ron Rich
by ds100h » Sun Jun 21, 2015 3:18 pm
by eddie » Sun Jun 21, 2015 6:42 pm
by Ron Rich » Sun Jun 21, 2015 9:57 pm
by eddie » Mon Jun 22, 2015 3:40 am
by Ron Rich » Mon Jun 22, 2015 4:26 am
by emily » Sat Jun 27, 2015 5:52 am
by MattTech » Sat Jun 27, 2015 7:28 am
emily wrote:Thanks for all the advice guys! I've got another question for you. I'm assuming that the power cord on my jukebox should be a three prong with a ground? Mine does not have a ground and I think that might be one reason why I'm getting a bit of a humming sound. Thanks again for your patience with a jukebox beginner!![]()
Emily
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