Hi people,
Just a few days after fixing my very first CD player :
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/repair/vintage-cd-player-repair-philips-cdc-486-6-disc-changer/msg3366804/#msg3366804... here is another one. Also Philips, also from my dad.
CD player is not a stand-alone unit, it's part of an "all in one" / combination stereo system, branded Philips, that daddy bough in 2000.... Yes, as you can see from the pics, it's written crap and ugly all over it. I doubt Philips designed this horrible thing... they probably just hired some factory in China and tasked them with designing the thing, insisting that the total cost must be under 20 bucks... probably.
This thing is so crap that the old swing arm in comparison, is already starting to feel to me like a tremendously fine piece of engineering and build quality.
Neither me or my dad care the slightest bit for this stereo system as a whole. The only thing my dad likes, very much, in this thing, is the 3 disc CD changer, since that allows him to listen to several hours of uninterrupted music. A functionality he values a lot.
So although I don't care for this ugly crap thing, however it would be cool to be able to make my dad happy again... that's what drives me in this particular repair
I doubt anybody would care helping me repair this things, and I understand that... but well, if only one single person posts one single sentence that leads me to the solution, then that's all I need !
OK so let's get started.
I started working on it yesterday. First big fear I had, since it's an all in one design, is how the hell am I going to ACCESS the CD player, and work on it in situ ! Luckily that was easily solved as you can see : it's actually not badly designed. The turntable at the top, is removed in seconds with just 4 screws. Then the CD player is next in line. A dozen screws later and the whole CD player unit can be pulled out of the system. It's connected to the chassis only by 2 ribbon cables, gifted with connectors. Cables are quite long, enough to conveniently lay the CD player sub-assembly flat on to the bench, next to the main chassis. This way it is accessible and can still be operated using the front panel buttons on the main unit.
OK so now it's like we had a "normal" stand-alone CD player to fix. So what do we have at hand...
The design/construction of it does not make it easy to work on sadly. There is a single PCB as far as electronics go. It's screwed over the head assembly, covering it completely ! You get to see only the solder side... though the silkscreen does nicely show / identify the various sections of the PCB, which is convenient :
- " Loader Control "
- " HF Amplifier "
- " Servo Drivers "
- " Decoder "
- " DAC Audio "
Silk screen gives some more useful information like, what pins drive teh various servos, power supply points, left and right audio channels, etc. It's all very much appreciated because of course there is no schematic or service manual for this thing. Well, to be honest I have nt even bothered searching ! I can't believe this kind of crap products could have schematics available. Not even sure how I would go about identifying the thing... what model number ?!...
All that is good. What's NOT good is that the whole player is actually one big giant piece ! The carrousel, tray, head assembly, PCB.. .it's all one big indivisble unit : when you open or close the tray, the entire assembly comes out ! So, if I open the tray, the head, as well as the PCB, move outward along with the tray, of which they are a part of. So it's not easy to probe the PCB if it's moving...
Also, if I want to access the component side of the PCB, I have to flip it, but then of course that means I can't open the tray or it the board will get ripped...
Also, if you wnat to flip the board, you have to desolder the terminals of the two big motors that drive the tray and rotate the carousel.. because the the motors are solders directly onto the PCB ! No cables, no nothing.
Also, it's near impossible to get to see the laser lens and photo diodes.. without destroying the tray with a chainsaw, as it's part of it, and covering the diodes 90%.
OK so that's for access and serviceability.
Symptoms now : old man complained that the player would not detect discs any more : it would cycle through the 3 discs of the changer, acting as if it found no discs in there. So basically, the very same symptoms the swing arm had !
Given what I learned from the swing arm repair, I did :
- Cleaned the laser lens thoroughly, using IPA and Q tips, because the tray was covered with lots of dust ! I mean a lot, what you would get if using the player in a garage, not in a living room... it's probably what he did. Component side of the PCB too was very dusty, so cleaned that. Solder side had weird milk / white stains all over it, don't know where that might come from. Flooded it with IPA again... that did it, clean now.
- Tried to see if the laser was firing... can't see anything but it's hard to get too as I said, that I can only see it from a very shallow angle, so I can't vouch for anything
Need to try harder.
- Checked the spindle motor : unlike the swing arm, the spindle here does turn. However I noticed that it seems to turn properly only when it's unloaded, ie when there is no disc to rotate. When it is loaded with a disc, I can see the spindle get moving, but it stops immediately, having moved only a tiny bit, a fraction of a turn, I don't know, a quart of a revolution, something like that, then it switches to the next disc. Seems weird to me. So maybe the motor is tired ? Or the driver is weak somehow. weak power rail, what have you. Could be so many things.
That's it. Spent only an hour on it last evening, so didn't get very far of course.
As always, any advise / contribution much appreciated... I understand it's not exactly fine piece of audio equipment so hard to motivate people on that one but... it's not about saving a piece of junk, it's about making the old man happy with a functional CD changer unit, nothing more.
A few piccies below.
So while everybody laughs at me spending time on this master piece... ahem... I will resume work on it.
Next to do I think :
- Try harder to see if I can see the laser firing.
- Check power supplies, based on the silk screen information I can find here and there on the PCB.
- Try to access the photo diode and clean them too : a clean laser is not help if the receiving side is obfuscated with dust, I guess...
- Check the spindle motor on the component tester and / or check currents in the windings on the scope, to see if all windings are healthy.
The fun begins...