Show us what's inside

Wow, monster!

Sorry Richard :worried:

Inside my DCS rossini player

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Full of Cambridge air😉

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Too late you are now on the list :wink:


Does this qualify as unauthorized modification …:face_with_monocle::joy::joy:?

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Was that the cause of the slightly off bottom end?

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I am very conflicted @Charlie. My heart tells me I want to empty that bottle but my head tells me the bottle will cause unwanted reverberations to the system if it is empty.

Best send me the bottle and remove this conundrum. :joy:

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Oh, the humanity.

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Audiolab 8000CDM, just about to replace the belt on the drawer loader. I use loom bands for this, saves them ending up in the sea!
Early audiolab equipment is beautifully built and laid out IMO

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Clear Macintosh Classic anyone?

The Macintosh Classic is a familiar vintage computer that is known for its classic design, as well as its grey casing. In images shared by “@DongleBookPro” on Twitter, Apple used a different casing style during its development.

Originally sold from October 1990, the Macintosh Classic boasted a Motorola 68000 8MHz processor and 1MB of memory, expandable to 4MB, as well as a nine-inch 512x342 monochrome screen. It also housed a 40MB SCSI hard drive, a 3.5-inch floppy disk drive, and weighed in the region of 16 pounds.

All details as posted on https://appleinsider.com/articles/20/12/06/clear-macintosh-classic-prototype-surfaces-on-twitter

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I’ve still got my beige Mac Classic, never could quite bring myself to let it go.

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Finally took the courage to open my NAP 120 to satisfy my curiosity. If I remember well, it’s an early 80’s example. Not sure if it’s ever been serviced!:flushed:

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Almost a shame to service it, if that’s original?

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More like an early mid '70s example…

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I remember we talked about it before in the old forum but I couldn’t open it at the time.
Do you think it has ever been serviced, Richard?

Do you know the bearing manufacturer? Pure curiosity.

Hello @Martinzero.

That’s a great question…

I happen to know OEM bearings for the Ittok were supplied by a company called NMB UK Ltd. You may know Linn no longer support this product and so are not able to provide replacement parts.

Although, I don’t know what replacements bearings Johnnie at Audio Origami is using now. Maybe just ask him.

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No idea. The caps are not new types. In remarkably good nick though. Can you read their dates?

I think they are coded? The chassis is held by 6 screws (4 of them attached to rubber feet). Really strange configuration. Here a a few more photos. Hope it helps. Thanks in advance.

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