Glenn said:
So for laughs, I just opened my cheapy Panasonic with 'digital servo'.
It has 5 ICs on the 'transport' assembly, a display which is probably
the system controller also and a 4558 opamp on the main board. Not a
pot in sight.
A long time back a colleague and I opened up a misbehaving Sony CD player
belonging to a mate of his and our jaws dropped at the miniscule size of the pcbs
inside. Aside from the mechanism and display it was about 2 large SMD chips and a
PSU and some passives ! On single sided 'paper' boards too ! I think we cleaned
something and it started working again. Again a no-brainer. It wasn't worth
anything so tried mucking about to see if it makes it better.
As for your player, Graham's suggestion is as good as any. The issues
I've seen and read about usually have to do with dirty optics and/or
laser diodes that go bad. There are many surfaces that can get dirty
and can't be cleaned because they're in the optics block so the only
option is to replace it. For the price of cheapy players, if worst
comes to worst, just replace it.
I have a 'classic' CD player, a Denon DCD-1700. Won awards and stuff. It was the
first CD player I heard that 'sounded right' and given the engineering inside it
damn well should do ! One of the first to use oversampling for example. Unlike
the modern ones you can pick up with your little finger, this one is actually
*heavy* !
It's so beautifully made that when it started playing up I had it serviced by the
Uk distributor - fortunately nearby and an excellent company. Took it there and
collected it in person. Cost no more than a cheapie replacement to get everything
working fine again and it works fine still, about 15 ~ 16 yrs on from when it
was made.
Graham