Hi All
About three years ago had someone bring a Casio DH200 in for repair. It had the squeal and he had tried to fix it.
When I opened it up he appeared to have made a very good job of the repair
He had cut the old cap out and stuck a new one in as per the instructions
Only problem was that he literary has stuck it in WITH SUPERGLUE
When I tracked down the instructions he had followed, they actually said "ensure that you stick the new cap in the same place you removed the old one from"
FOLLOWING THE INSTRUCTIONS TO THE LETTER
Brian
P.S. I should add I laughed so much I did not charge him for the repair and it still brings a smile to my face thinking about it
--- On Tue, 5/4/10, Alexis V. Rogers <alexis.v.rogers@...> wrote:
From: Alexis V. Rogers <alexis.v.rogers@...>
Subject: [vintagesynthrepair] dumbest repair job ever
To: vintagesynthrepair@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, May 4, 2010, 9:02 PM
I'm a basement tech in the middle of metalguitarland so I don't see many vintage synths come across my bench but I recently had a JX-8P in that had me on the floor laughing so I thought I'd share with the list.
The IEC socket had been removed and a new power cord was spliced in and wrapped in clear Scotch tape with some additional Scotch tape covering the IEC connector's mounting hole. The owner complained that something was rattling around inside and that there were a few keys that wouldn't depress. I opened the synth up to find...two chicken leg bones and pork bone.Message
Re: [vintagesynthrepair] dumbest repair job ever
2010-05-05 by brian walker
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