| It's very likely it needs cleaning. I use one of those cleaners that is
built into a cassette case, which seems to do the trick. If you have
some heavy deposits, cotton buds and isopropyl alcohol (about �1 per
250ml at Boots) works very well too, provided you can access the heads
AND see what you're doing!
I'm surprised you experience most problems with TDK tapes. I have
*never* had a TDK tape go wrong in any way in the car. I have
experienced similar problems with That's tapes in the car, once they've
been used a few times or if they get hot.
Dave
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|
I bought one of the Allsop head-cleaning kits, which succeeding in
scrubbing a large amount of brown gunk out of the player, but didn't
help the speed instability very much.
I decided to have a go at fixing it myself before consigning it to the
repair shop. A colleague here had a spare drive belt for the same type
of set, so we first tried changing that, which didn't help at all.
When we had the cassette player running in the lab, it appeared that
pressing the pinch roller more firmly against the tape cured the
problem. So, we disassembled it some more, and applied a bit more
bend to the spring that presses the rollers against the tape. This
seems to have fixed it, although I wonder how long it is going to stay
fixed. I think that maybe it could do with new pinch rollers as well.
Trevor
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