Month: May 2026
Vintage Arcade Board Power Supply Restoration: Identifying Burnt Traces and Replacing Hybrid Voltage Regulators
You power on a classic arcade board. The monitor flickers. One of the game’s sound channels drops out intermittently. You measure the…
Diagnosing Servo Motor Failures in Vintage CD and LaserDisc Players: Symptom-to-Root-Cause Guide
Your LaserDisc player won’t track a disc. Your CD player skips tracks and the laser seems to be hunting constantly. The motor…
Complete guide to recapping vintage mixing consoles: signal path analysis and electrolytic selection
You’re looking at a 1970s Soundcraft or Allen & Heath console you picked up last month. The channel faders move smoothly, the…
Why Vintage Video Game ROM Cartridges Develop Read Errors and Can They Be Recovered
You’re holding a cartridge you haven’t played in 15 years. You blow into it out of habit—a ritual every 80s kid learned,…
Why vintage speakers develop rattling cones and when reconing is worth the cost
You’re playing a record you haven’t heard in years—something you remember sounding clean and clear. But now there’s a raspy, papery sound…
Why Vintage Computer Power Supplies Develop DC Offset and How to Measure It
You power up an Amiga 500 or Apple IIc you’ve just restored, and the system boots but behaves erratically. Disk access fails…
Why Vintage LED Displays Fade and What Causes Segment Failure Patterns
You power up a classic 1980s multimeter, alarm clock, or audio equipment display and notice something wrong immediately. The digits that were…
Why Reel-to-Reel Tape Speed Wobbles Occur and How to Adjust Capstan Tension
You’re playing back a master reel of Chet Baker from 1962, and something sounds wrong—not obviously wrong, but subtly off in a…
The Physics of Vinyl Record Groove Wear: Can Cleaning Restore Playability
You place the stylus on a vinyl record you’ve owned for twenty years. The opening seconds sound fine, then distortion creeps in—not…
The Complete Guide to Restoring Corroded Vintage Audio Connectors and RCA Jacks
You plug in your turntable, press play, and hear something that stops you cold: a crackling, intermittent signal cutting in and out.…