audio problem and installation

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by M. Gomaa, May 14, 2004.

  1. M. Gomaa

    M. Gomaa Guest

    Hi,

    I have an Accord LX 93. The Honda original cassette has the following
    problem: it plays the cassettes at a higher speed than the regular -which
    causes funny sounds. Does anyone know the possible reason/solution of this
    problem?
    I opened it and I suspect that the tape speed regulators (which control the
    tape speed) are working in the wrong direction: there are two of them -one
    for each playing direction- and just one of them should work, but the
    opposite one -in my case- is working. Is there a solution for that?

    Anyway, I'd like to install a CD player. Is it better to connect it to the
    radio/cassette player or to remove the cassette player? How are they
    connected? What about the power source for the CD player?...

    Any advice will be appreciated.

    Thanks
    MG
     
    M. Gomaa, May 14, 2004
    #1
  2. M. Gomaa

    TCS Guest

    It's caused by a dirty pinch roller and/or capston. It's the rubber wheel
    that pinches the tape against a steel roler next to the tape head. It
    regulates the speed. If it slips, than the take up reel will pull the
    tape at a greater than normal speed.


     
    TCS, May 14, 2004
    #2
  3. M. Gomaa

    lcopps Guest

    I would make sure a tape fragment is not wrapped around the capstan.
    This will also cause the tape to play fast and unsteady. The Capstan is
    the metal rod that pokes through the cassette that pulls the tape
    through at a steady speed. Your rubber pich roller may also be dirty.
    This rubber wheel pinches the tape against the capstan. I do not know
    if the type of radio in a '93 is an industry standard design like my '88
    Accord. If it is, then it is well worth it to replace it with a nice
    state-of-the-art unit with a Compact disk player. If the radio is
    industry standard, then connecting it up should not be a problem.
     
    lcopps, May 15, 2004
    #3
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