Thank you a lot for your vidéos, they are really explicit, I'm in France and I have a CMM1 cadette, that I want to clean and fully restore. I don't have any knowledge on electricity so I let that to pros, but for the mechanism maybe I could do something and thanks to you I hope my juke will run great. Have a good day, and thanks for all.
I have a model mm1. Not the same as this one need some help gripper not pick ing up records and does not stop on some of the letters and need a new amp
HI, WD-40 is no good for lubrication, it displaces water. You need to use a silicone base or light weight oil when lubing moving parts. WD-40 will work for a bit but then draws in dirt and dust and your parts will be sticking again. Just my thoughts and I know my jukebox repair guy is against this too.
One does need to use care with any light lubricant you use, that any of its chemical solvent components are plastic compatible , not all of them are , the advantage Wd 40 does have is that's evaporating solvents won't damage plastic it does leave behind a coating of light oil , I have used a flexible clock oil applicator or needle oil applicator (though I don't use clock oil) as it lets you place drops of lubricant in a exact location like on the sleeve bearings between gears it allows for better control so you get no over spray ,Its important to note that WD-40's solvents "Before they evaporate" (and this is an important point) will flash ignite and burn quite easily, so always make sure you let them sit and evaporate fully. before using the machine. I do know someone who tryed to lubricate the pivot in a EM mechanical pinball mechanism that had sparking electrical contacts and they found that out the hard way,
Thank you a lot for your vidéos, they are really explicit, I'm in France and I have a CMM1 cadette, that I want to clean and fully restore. I don't have any knowledge on electricity so I let that to pros, but for the mechanism maybe I could do something and thanks to you I hope my juke will run great. Have a good day, and thanks for all.
Missed you. Thanks for all you do.
Good lord, that was a lot of wd!
Thanks for this! Are you able to go over how to service a bill acceptor for a CD model Rowe AMI?
We plugged in our jukebox and it was showing er32 we reset it then it started smoking a little bit what do I need to do to locate the problem
I have a model mm1. Not the same as this one need some help gripper not pick ing up records and does not stop on some of the letters and need a new amp
HI, WD-40 is no good for lubrication, it displaces water. You need to use a silicone base or light weight oil when lubing moving parts. WD-40 will work for a bit but then draws in dirt and dust and your parts will be sticking again. Just my thoughts and I know my jukebox repair guy is against this too.
One does need to use care with any light lubricant you use, that any of its chemical solvent components are plastic compatible , not all of them are , the advantage Wd 40 does have is that's evaporating solvents won't damage plastic it does leave behind a coating of light oil , I have used a flexible clock oil applicator or needle oil applicator (though I don't use clock oil) as it lets you place drops of lubricant in a exact location like on the sleeve bearings between gears it allows for better control so you get no over spray ,Its important to note that WD-40's solvents "Before they evaporate" (and this is an important point) will flash ignite and burn quite easily, so always make sure you let them sit and evaporate fully. before using the machine. I do know someone who tryed to lubricate the pivot in a EM mechanical pinball mechanism that had sparking electrical contacts and they found that out the hard way,