Monday, July 04, 2022

89 Lincoln Mark VII LSC stereo was refurbed for incredible price for a LOT of work, less than 1/2 what I'd expect to pay

 

Work done to the radio: 
"Replaced in excess of 4 dozen electrolytic capacitors, most of which were leaking 
Repaired a copper circuit trace that was eaten away by leaked out electrolyte
 Replaced an LC7217 Integrated Circuit (PLL Frequency Synthesizer) that had been damaged internally by corrosive electrolyte from the leaking capacitors
Cleaned all circuit boards 
Ultrasonically cleaned 7 ICs which I had to remove and reinstall 
Replaced the rubber cassette drive belt because it had deteriorated into a tarry mess
 Replaced the Cassette drive motor because the tar from the belt had seeped into the bronze motor shaft bushing 
Cleaned the contacts of the Cassette audio signal reversing switch and applied anti-oxidant compound to them. 
Cleaned and demagnetized Cassette head
 Cleaned all Cassette Capstans and rubber Pinch Rollers 
Repaired 6 of the faceplate button blister switch contacts by recoating them with a silver-based conductive compound 
Cleaned the entire faceplate 
Tested all functions at 25 and 135 degrees F for 12 hours
 Tested at extreme humidity level of 85% RH 
Note: the majority of the capacitors replaced with solid tantalum caps, which will never leak, and the others are very long life Panasonic electrolytic aluminum-can caps rated for 105 degrees C, which have an excellent reputation for long life.


Personal note, I'm an electronics tech for Ridgid since covid killed my dealership photography job, and I'm fixing circuit boards every day in the repair dept, and customers never get charged less than 75 an hour labor, for fast work, or about 400 to get soldering and replacing electronic components. 

I'm telling you, this guy is doing a ton of work for very little profit

1 comment:

  1. That is a very reasonable price for that amount of work. You're right that there can't be much profit there.

    ReplyDelete