I have seen so many stupid you tube videos I was embarrassed for the people who produced them. Your video was a breath of fresh air. Your parts and tool list was spot on. The way you presented your work was great. Well thought out, not boring, to the point, great job, I rang the bell. Only comment is about the ground. Please leave it the way Technics intended. Use a bolt and nut with a small knurled nut to tighten the ground wire. Always separately ground your turntable, don’t use one of the two cartridge ground points as a chassis ground point. This will not work as well and it “Could” damage your expensive cartridge. Keep up the excellent work!
I was able to swap out the PCB board for a self grounded board as well as install female rcas on my table with a combination of this video and another video. First time Ive had no hiss, buzz, hum or anything... Im really happy.
great video but just don't internal ground your tonearms. technics engineers had a reason to put a grounding wire there, and it's the humm noize that will apear over time
This is a great and way less expensive mod than the other options online. However, instead of going through the trouble of cutting sheet metal, you could just use rubber grommets to cover the jagged edges around the holes.
I need some decent right angled RCA cables for my RP-8000 MK2 for setting in battle mode. The ones that come with are cheap and have a humming sound with out without ground connected. Idk if I need some adapters to make it right angled so I can use some quality longer head ones or what
Nice! Frankly I don't understand why that isn't standard on every turntable ever (or at least decks made since the 70s). Potentially very stupid question - could something similar be done to consumer level Technics direct drive, e.g. the SL-1900?
I would go all the way throgh the arm and replace the cheap cabling with better cabling. Kab modifications does this as an upgrade. Kevin is teriffic as he modifies these tables for audiophile playback in home. Thanks for sharing its a uniquely simlpe way of preserving your table.
Which part of the rca port do I attach the hot wire and the ground wire. I am assuming the hot wire goes on the middle connection and the ground on the outer connector
Nice video :) But how is the clearance under the deck when using separate RCA cables plugged in that way? I have been servicing 1200's for over 20 years now, and 90% of the time the primary failure points of rca cables is inside the strain relief at the plug end. If that end is constantly coming into contact with the surface you have your 1200 on, or bent at an angle all the time it seems like this would expedite the failure rate? I'm sure some thin rca's would have enough clearance, but asking as there are millions of types of rca cables and many people may not have the right ones, they might be too thick and have to resort to using flimsy cables so they are not constantly bent at a right angle causing strain on the weakest link. I have seen RCA mods where the plate is in place of one of the hinge brackets and they come straight out avoiding this possible issue. cheers!
I’m not quite sure I get it. Can you tell me the main reason you did this, please? Are you replacing poor quality RCA jacks with better quality RCA jacks? I’m trying to decide why I should do this in my home. Thank you very much. Great video guys.
You do this so you can easily change RCA cables on the fly. No more need to open up the deck and solder another cable in... The self ground thing I don't understand... I see no reason for that.
I have seen so many stupid you tube videos I was embarrassed for the people who produced them. Your video was a breath of fresh air. Your parts and tool list was spot on. The way you presented your work was great. Well thought out, not boring, to the point, great job, I rang the bell. Only comment is about the ground. Please leave it the way Technics intended. Use a bolt and nut with a small knurled nut to tighten the ground wire. Always separately ground your turntable, don’t use one of the two cartridge ground points as a chassis ground point. This will not work as well and it “Could” damage your expensive cartridge.
Keep up the excellent work!
Please explain the reason why.
Simplest and least expensive method to date, appreciate it.
I was able to swap out the PCB board for a self grounded board as well as install female rcas on my table with a combination of this video and another video. First time Ive had no hiss, buzz, hum or anything... Im really happy.
Can you provide a link for the RCA jacks?
This maybe the best tutorial for this type of mod.
One of the best tutorials I’ve seen on RUclips! Very well put together! Thank you!
theres a lot of agurements on internal grounding or having a seperate ground wire.
great video but just don't internal ground your tonearms. technics engineers had a reason to put a grounding wire there, and it's the humm noize that will apear over time
Extremely well presented. 👍👍🍺🍺
Ground of the RCA connectors is mounted against the metal plate, so it's connected with the ground of the turntable chassis.
This is a great and way less expensive mod than the other options online. However, instead of going through the trouble of cutting sheet metal, you could just use rubber grommets to cover the jagged edges around the holes.
this is so helpful, thank you!
It would help if you added links to get jack parts
What an excellent idea! Thanks for this vid, guys! 👍
I need some decent right angled RCA cables for my RP-8000 MK2 for setting in battle mode. The ones that come with are cheap and have a humming sound with out without ground connected. Idk if I need some adapters to make it right angled so I can use some quality longer head ones or what
Nice! Frankly I don't understand why that isn't standard on every turntable ever (or at least decks made since the 70s). Potentially very stupid question - could something similar be done to consumer level Technics direct drive, e.g. the SL-1900?
Why? Money! If you can save a dollar per turntable and you produce a million tables that’s a million dollars. Duh.
Damn that’s a lot. Seem like building a new 1200
Great video guys. Thanks so much.
I would go all the way throgh the arm and replace the cheap cabling with better cabling.
Kab modifications does this as an upgrade. Kevin is teriffic as he modifies these tables for audiophile playback in home.
Thanks for sharing its a uniquely simlpe way of preserving your table.
Might as well replace the cheap tonearm with a real one as well. Or sell it and buy a real turntable.
my question is where can i purchase the jacks from. ps great video
Which part of the rca port do I attach the hot wire and the ground wire. I am assuming the hot wire goes on the middle connection and the ground on the outer connector
Nice video :) But how is the clearance under the deck when using separate RCA cables plugged in that way? I have been servicing 1200's for over 20 years now, and 90% of the time the primary failure points of rca cables is inside the strain relief at the plug end. If that end is constantly coming into contact with the surface you have your 1200 on, or bent at an angle all the time it seems like this would expedite the failure rate? I'm sure some thin rca's would have enough clearance, but asking as there are millions of types of rca cables and many people may not have the right ones, they might be too thick and have to resort to using flimsy cables so they are not constantly bent at a right angle causing strain on the weakest link. I have seen RCA mods where the plate is in place of one of the hinge brackets and they come straight out avoiding this possible issue. cheers!
They use 90 degree rca adapter jacks
Shoulda added that info to the video
Good job keep it up.
Good job bro
Nice job guys, thanks.
Like the video, great explanation, not too long.
Thank you so much!
Should have used XLR, balanced, tho. Right? Or not possible?
Kool and the gang. I love you guys
Great!!
Thanks. good job, keep it up!!!!
I’m not quite sure I get it. Can you tell me the main reason you did this, please? Are you replacing poor quality RCA jacks with better quality RCA jacks?
I’m trying to decide why I should do this in my home.
Thank you very much. Great video guys.
You do this so you can easily change RCA cables on the fly. No more need to open up the deck and solder another cable in... The self ground thing I don't understand... I see no reason for that.
@@jordesign It's so you can get rid of the little annoying ground wire that always gets broken too
@@sihargreaves Gotcha!
Thats genius 👏 Thanks
Please don’t do the self ground mod. My 1200 had it and I reverted it back to the original setting and never had a problem.
Just curious, what was the issue with self grounding?
@@andykelly7321 You get a hum noise that doesn't go away.
@@pinomarino8917 Thanks for your reply. :)
after watching this, I want to make a similar change for my M3D instead of buying a new MK7 or M7L
Can you guys do that to my turntable
Same. Could you do mine. I'm afraid of messing them up. Or where can I take them to get this done?
Got as far as the tool list 😬
Never ever ground the cartridge right/left negative leads to the chassis
Not bad. But i just replace the cable from inside out
My god.....il piatto si toglie prima di ribaltare il giradischi
And what do you do after the repair/ upgrade? Scratching records.... it is a sinn.
For the price of a technics you could buy a real turntable which will destroy the 1200’s in sound quality.
You won’t have to do anything to it either.
but beat matching will be a chore .
False
DO NOT use a drill at any time, on any part of a turntable. Its aaking for trouble, and stripped holes. Dont do it