Repairing a Cavernous 50-Year-old Cassette Deck.

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  • Опубликовано: 15 янв 2023
  • Nothing to see ere' just a simple and easy cassette deck repair, nice to have something go smoothly every once in a while, haha.

Комментарии • 106

  • @HifiJelly
    @HifiJelly  Год назад +9

    Song at the end of the video:

  • @Ricecooker64
    @Ricecooker64 Год назад +13

    Most repair videos make me click off, but these videos keep me watching. Keep it up!

  • @davedave5787

    the build quality is long gone from 76. Your a great tech!!

  • @tomarnd8724
    @tomarnd8724 Год назад +3

    The very first cassette decks were top loaders, this kind was actually the first improvement since you could now stack other components on top

  • @heelan19
    @heelan19 Год назад +3

    I love the garage door like quality of that door

  • @error52
    @error52 Год назад +10

    Excellent work on that cassette deck! I really like your videos - they look so well put together. Here's an idea - as much as I love these old wooden boxes, I think the old Yamaha will look really awesome with a transparent plastic cover instead. That way all that beautiful craftsmanship inside will be on display.

  • @gevowavemagnet
    @gevowavemagnet Год назад +2

    I had that Yamaha model, bought it in 1976. Was the first Hi Fi deck I ever owned. Went to the local Hi Fi shop back then, looking for a reel to reel. The salesman told me "get a cassette deck, man. They've come a long way in the last couple of years, sound really good, and about a third of the price of a Reel to reel deck". I was sold. These decks really did sound good. The lighting looked so cool in a dark room, glad you left it intact.

  • @eftalanquest
    @eftalanquest Год назад +3

    i like how this deck would perfectly match one of yamaha's current high end hifi components

  • @catonawavewave
    @catonawavewave Год назад +19

    I just started watching your videos over the past few days and they're great! Really motivating me to start upgrading my Hi-Fi rig.

  • @Poppinwheeeeellllllieeeeez
    @Poppinwheeeeellllllieeeeez Год назад

    Im 44 and my father had one before I was born. They are tanks.

  • @jorgelbarral
    @jorgelbarral Год назад +1

    Great video, very soothing, although I laughed at the end when you eject the cassette tape!

  • @JamesE707
    @JamesE707 Год назад +2

    Super photography here.

  • @andyfinlay9776
    @andyfinlay9776 Год назад +4

    I was given one of these back in 94 that needed a service, so belts and pinch roller. (Yes, you didn't change that, fairly standard size part too!) In about 96-97 I mixed down a studio recording that a band went on to mime/film a video to; I then took the machine with chrome tape to a cable TV editing suite where to the amazement of the crew there, I played in 4.5 mins of audio that synced perfectly, like frame perfect with the video on their Umatic machines! I still have this deck in my office and may well get round to servicing it again this year as it hasn't really been used for the last 10. The Yamaha 511S is a very well designed and built cassette deck!

  • @ingenfestbrems
    @ingenfestbrems Год назад +2

    There’s many toploaders machines before this that was amazingly good.

  • @aftertheendtimes
    @aftertheendtimes Год назад +2

    You do it well with demagnitizer 😍💚 I am about to do same operation on a beautiful National Panasonic RS-612-US Fit new belts and fix a issue with the sound, hope that ill have same luck that you had with this beautiful Yamaha with contact cleaner 😜😄🥰

  • @moontan91
    @moontan91 Год назад +1

    i saw one of those at the Museum of Civilization.

  • @xray111xxx
    @xray111xxx Год назад +2

    This is from the 70s. The tell is the FeCr choice for the tape formulations. Replace belts, and check any mode idler pulleys, re cap the machine with quality nichicon or similar, and clean the whole tape path, demagnetize the heads and metal parts of the tape path. Once you do that barring any noisy transistors, you're done. Anything of course address. Trying not to spoil your video.

  • @paulb4uk
    @paulb4uk Год назад +2

    This really is a well made deck i do like yamaha products .i have an old yamaha amplifier ca v1 from 1979 .

  • @kennixox262
    @kennixox262 Год назад +3

    That was a very popular cassette configuration in the mid 1970's. What you have show, Marantz also had this. Earlier decks were more on a horizontal format making stacking components difficult. I only remember this type from my teen years and when I finally got my own system a Nakimichi, it was typical for the latter half of the 1980's.