Soldering technic 1200s

Home :: Oldschool - vinyl and disc Djs topic :: Soldering technic 1200sReply
Soldering technic 1200s
Posted on: 26.12.2012 by Blake Tadic
I have a pair of technic 1200's mk2's i got for really cheap, the problem with them is though that they sound really crappy. So i googled and did some researched and I narrowed it down to it most likely being the rca cables, i youtubed some videos and found some on how to fix the technics. They all told me to buy some new rca wires, strip them and then desolder or take out my current rca wires and solder the new ones onto the tables. So by doing this will my turntables sound better? because they sound really staticy and just plain bad right now, one is worse than the other. Also is soldering hard to do? because i would rather learn to do it myself than pay someone to fix it. Or would it be better to go to a professional who knows what there doing? thanks all! and hope you all had a merry Christmas and happy holidays!
Blake Tadic
26.12.2012
I have a pair of technic 1200's mk2's i got for really cheap, the problem with them is though that they sound really crappy. So i googled and did some researched and I narrowed it down to it most likely being the rca cables, i youtubed some videos and found some on how to fix the technics. They all told me to buy some new rca wires, strip them and then desolder or take out my current rca wires and solder the new ones onto the tables. So by doing this will my turntables sound better? because they sound really staticy and just plain bad right now, one is worse than the other. Also is soldering hard to do? because i would rather learn to do it myself than pay someone to fix it. Or would it be better to go to a professional who knows what there doing? thanks all! and hope you all had a merry Christmas and happy holidays!
Shan Bauerly
14.01.2013
IMO, the HOSA cables are likely the least expensive, and are just fine for non-audiophile uses. Get yourself a long cable and cut it in half and you're in business. I prefer shorter cables. Do the internal grounding mod while you're in there.
Federico Vilas
09.01.2013
send your 1200 to turntabletech.com and save you some time...he does good work
Paul Revoir
06.01.2013
I would check the 4 cartridge contact points inside the tonearm(looks like 4 small metal circles). I've seen this over and over, where one of those circles can get some dust or dirt on it and cause some noise with your turntable.
Blake Tadic
26.12.2012
Ah thanks all! Yeah i'm pretty sure its not the tonearm, and the neelde/cart are pretty much brand new so those are fine as well. Thanks all! will look up those videos and look more into grounding believe i should open up my technics now! Any more advice/help is always appreciated.
Nevada Edgette
26.12.2012
Soldering the RCA's on Technics isn't really that hard. You should practice "Tinning" as it will make the process a lot easier. I can't remember the name of the video on Youtube that will help you diagnose your tonearm to see where the audio problem is. All I remember is that it involves a Multimeter. Also watch Viperfrank's youtube tutorials, dude is awesome.
Halley Wurzer
26.12.2012
Get the right gear and supplies, watch some how-to's, practice on some spare wires and you will be fine. More than likely the source of the sound quality issues is a bad ground connection though (assuming it isn't a needle / cart / tonearm issue). Replace the ground wire as well or look up how to internally ground.

<< Back to Oldschool - vinyl and disc Djs topicReply

Copyright 2012-2023
DJRANKINGS.ORG n.g.o.
Chuo-ku, Osaka, Japan

Created by Ajaxel CMS

Terms & Privacy