Vinyl Revival

One thing that has been on my to-do list for far too long is to clean up my turntable so I can start listening to and ripping vinyl again. It’s embarrassing to admit how long I’ve been putting it off… I think I noticed it being erratic two years ago, bought the DeoxIT stuff I needed to fix it a year later, and then sat on it until today. Anyways, it’s done at last! Here’s how…

Start with a Technics SL-1500 in good condition save for the fact that it will vacillate wildly between making your favorite musicians sound like they’ve been hit on the head a few times too many, and been breathing helium.

Also have a good electronic switch cleaner and lubricant ready. I used Caig Labs DeoxIT Fader formula for the switches and pots, and DeoxIT Gold for the connections between the board with the trim switches and the speed controller and motor board.

Set it down on your work surface. First thing you’ll need to do is remove the platter. For this model it’s held in place by a magnet, so you can just grasp it by the two holes uncovered by removing the slip mat and pull it straight up and off the motor.

Next, flip it over and remove the bottom case. You’ll want to loosen all the phillips screws on the bottom, keeping track of where the long and short ones came from, or just leaving them in their holes and lifting them out with the casing.

Once you’ve got it open you’ll see this:

We have three targets for cleaning and lubrication here. In the lower left is the main speed selector and power switch. Hitting it with the chemicals should be easy since the mechanism is completely exposed. I recommend taking the board loose so you can drip the lubricant down in between the discs that make up the switch and use gravity to your advantage.

Next are the two speed adjustment potentiometers. You’ll wanna take the plate these are mounted to loose to give you better access to spray stuff in since as installed they’re hard to get at. Make sure to twist these lock to lock several times at each stage to circulate the cleaner well and get rid of built up gunk on the contacts.

Also, make sure to check that once you’ve screwed the plate with the potentiometers back in place that you can reinstall the knobs that go on them and turn them freely. There was enough play in the fitment on my turntable that on my first go the knobs would rub against the sunken area of the top case they fit into and I had to take everything back apart to adjust and get them moving freely.

Finally, you’ll want to take the big circuit board in the middle loose and take care of the two trim switches on it.

The trim switches are the two white knobs you can see in the below picture. Make sure to mark their initial position as if they are moved too far off the main adjustment knobs will not have the right range to adjust the speed of the turntable into a useable setting.

I also lubricated the motor using some Triflow sewing machine oil I had for *another* project I’ve been sitting on for too damn long (a seafoam green Singer 338). There’s a special Technics-approved oil for the purpose but I figured this stuff would work well enough. Can’t be any worse than not being oiled period for 20 years.

Once you’ve reinstalled that board, stitch everything back together, hook things back up, and enjoy the fruits of your labor.

Mad props to the author of Thrift Store Record Report for their awesome guide (http://recordreport.blogspot.com/2011/05/fixing-unstable-turntable-speed.html) to the SL-1300 that helped reassure me I wasn’t Doin’ It Wrong. Thanks also due to The Vinyl Engine for having the manual for my turntable available online (http://www.vinylengine.com/library/technics/sl-1500.shtml).

Zine review – Ashcan #1

Ashcan #1

Edited by Sean Castillo
Published in SF in October 2008

I scored my copy of Ashcan #1 at the Urban Craft Center in Santa Monica. Their collection of zines is kinda sparse, at least compared to the likes of Powell’s and Reading Frenzy, but it holds a wealth of classics for those willing to sift through its disorganized stacks. Ashcan wasn’t the oldest there, but it caught my eye.

The zine is half interviews with bands and the progenitor of a skateboard company, half short stories, comix, and zine reviews. Really interesting to read the interviews, both for the snapshots of their subject’s respective scenes and the funny anecdotes that always surface when you talk to a band. The two short pieces, A Few Thoughts on Pornography by Dustin Heron and illustrated by Amos Goldbaum, and White Powder by Justin Allen with illustrations by Kevin McCarthy, aren’t particulary ground breaking in their subject matter. Porn and blue collar labor have both been covered by innumerable authors, but that’s because they’re both ubiquitous and most everyone can relate. A fresh perspective on either is always interesting and both author/illustrator pairs kept me reading. How We Manage, written by Alexander Zeddemore and illustrated by Daniel Kaufeldt, accurately distills the agony of trying to find gainful employment post graduation, and the schadenfreude laden experience of going back to a maligned former employer to see what has changed, and what hasn’t.

Ashcan doesn’t seem to be particularly active any more, issue #3 came out in August of 2010 and not much looks to have happened since. There’s still an online presence at if you’re interested though.

http://ashcanmagazine.com/
ashcanmagazine@gmail.com
660 4th St. #420
San Francisco, CA 94107