Finally got to the CD drive on the Aiwa system on the bench, quick question for you all, I did see the answer once but google fuh is letting me down today, does anyone know the location of track 1 on a audio cd, is it the outermost or the innermost track please?
As I recall innermost track is track 1 and it goes outward to the end.
Innermost track is media descriptor and FAT, then audio tracks moving outward. You can see this yourself, as the disc will spin slower as you advance tracks.
Be mindful that many of the audio-only CD mechanisms are very sensitive to ambient light, particularly fluorescent or LED. You can make them so they never initialize just by taking the lid off the unit. Note that "sector zero" is actually so close to the hub that it never has anything printed on the back side to block ambient light; this can make it have trouble initializing, but once the head moves to where there is printing blocking ambient light, it has no trouble reading.
Finally got to the CD drive on the Aiwa system on the bench, quick question for you all, I did see the answer once but google fuh is letting me down today, does anyone know the location of track 1 on a audio cd, is it the outermost or the innermost track please?
As I recall innermost track is track 1 and it goes outward to the end.
You are correct and that is where the player is struggling to play track 1, track 2 plays but the slightest touch on the unit and it skips like a bastard, tracks 3 and higher, no problems. Mechanism looks to be nice and clean, no sign dried grease, dust or fluff on the gear wheels etc
I'll pull it out again and perhaps try a small amount of lube in that area where the head has to be tracks 1 and 2 and see if that help? Cant be much because if I lean the unit to the left or right by a few degrees it plays just fine?
Take a look at the rack & pinion that moves the head, and at the intermediary gears in the reader with a bright flashlight and magnifier. Sometimes there is just a single grain of sand that makes it bind up. The rack gear will have a spring-loaded backlash mechanism; make sure it has no more than one tooth or two of preload, and that it moves smoothly.
Rarely, but sometimes, audio player readers will have a leadscrew mechanism instead of a rack/pinion. Same story as far as looking for grit. If the drive for either type has a belt, remove it and look for it being gummy, hard, or deformed into an egg shape.
As your unit appears to be angle/shock sensitive, odds are one or more of the rubber isolation bobbins has hardened, cracked out, or compressed to the point it is useless. Disassemble the big flat-headed screws that hold the reader to the elevator mechanism and inspect to see if any are bottoming out when in the normal play-mode orientation.
Removing the assembly will also allow you to inspect the head drive mechanism more carefully.
Good hunting!
Talking about returning item to ebay seller, I had to do it too last week.
I was shopping for a null meter and found a cheap Fluke 845AB. Was sold as "used" and the description was saying "working and in good shape". I received the device. Physically it was not bad but it was dead and a lot of screws were missing all around. Someone probably tried to fix it and openned it to look around.
Man, I don't buy unless I see pics of ALL sides of the thing. If I don't - I don't buy. If I really want it bad I'll ask to please take all the pics, or I won't consider it.
fleaBay 101: Adventures in TE Shoppingmnem
*Back to the salt mines*