cleaing cassette heads and roller.

The owners manual for my new car says that I must clean the cassette player head and roller after every 30 hours of use,

OR it can become too dirty to clean!!!! Is that true?

The car is from 2004 and i'm guessing it's never had its cassette drive cleaned, but it plays fine. May i wait another 13 years?

Reply to
micky
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Cleaning the heads is more dependent upon the quality of the tapes than any thing else. At this point, I would use a "WET" cleaner if available. You take the chance of disturbing what little dirt that is there as well. Be careful. If you have any doubt, remove the unit from the vehicle and have a pro clean it. There is a good chance that the belts are nearing their en d of life too. These can be changed and the pinch roller can be treated to get it back to normal too.

Dan

Reply to
dansabrservices

Alcohol & cotton bud. head & whatsit first, rubber roller last. Drying properly is necessary. You can neglect it but sound quality will really suffer.

NT

Reply to
tabbypurr

a cleaning tape (cassette)

Reply to
Look165

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** Got the tiniest idea what happens if you never clean the pinch roller??

Obviously not.

..... Phil

Reply to
Phil Allison

anything else. At this point, I would use a "WET" cleaner if available. You take the chance of disturbing what little dirt that is there as well. Be careful. If you have any doubt, remove the unit from the vehicle and h ave a pro clean it. There is a good chance that the belts are nearing thei r end of life too. These can be changed and the pinch roller can be treate d to get it back to normal too.

is as much use as t*ts on a bull.

Reply to
tabbypurr

Abrasive to the head and doesn't shift anything off the roller.

Far better to open it and clean with a suitable solvent on a cotton bud.

The usual danger with muck build up, is the tape sticks to the capstan and winds around it. destroys the tape and doesn't do the deck much good either.

Reply to
Ian Field

And by the time you can get at it with a cotton bud - you can also see whether you did any good or not.

Reply to
Ian Field

?

Obviously not. "

The worst part is that the pinch roller is on the oxide side of the tape. O lder VCRs were like that but they fixed it by using an elevator gear and dr opping the pinch roller to the inside. There is no practical way to do this with an audio cassette.

Actually eight tracks were better in that respect, though the pinch roller was included in the cassette. Actually, some of them did not use rubber one s, they just made them out of plastic and they played fine. Actually they c ould outperform cassettes as they had double the tape speed. But there were other limitations, like no rewind.

To clean a pinch roller I usually used something abrasive, like a paint scu ffing pad. Like the idler wheel in a turntable, if you make it a bit smalle r it does not change the speed. In the case of a turntable it is the diamet er of the motor shaft, in a tape deck it is a matter of the capstan diamete r. Just don't make it small enough that it does not engage.

Oe main thing to keep the wow and flutter down is to make it even. If it is uneven you got problems. I almost always had the deck running when I clean ed the pinch roller, let it turn. I did the same with VCRs by using a dummy tape.

Anyway, older car cassette decks can be a real PITA. You might just want to get one of those fake cassettes that you plug something in to, like an MP3 player or something. Very few car cassette players were better than a 160 K MP3, if any. Or there are those FM modulators that just transmit to the F M, nut those are limited to 15 KHz. But do you really care when you are dri ving across Texas ? I doubt it.

Reply to
jurb6006

r??

Older VCRs were like that but they fixed it by using an elevator gear and dropping the pinch roller to the inside. There is no practical way to do th is with an audio cassette.

r was included in the cassette. Actually, some of them did not use rubber o nes, they just made them out of plastic and they played fine. Actually they could outperform cassettes as they had double the tape speed. But there we re other limitations, like no rewind.

cuffing pad. Like the idler wheel in a turntable, if you make it a bit smal ler it does not change the speed. In the case of a turntable it is the diam eter of the motor shaft, in a tape deck it is a matter of the capstan diame ter. Just don't make it small enough that it does not engage.

is uneven you got problems. I almost always had the deck running when I cle aned the pinch roller, let it turn. I did the same with VCRs by using a dum my tape.

to get one of those fake cassettes that you plug something in to, like an M P3 player or something. Very few car cassette players were better than a 16

0 K MP3, if any. Or there are those FM modulators that just transmit to the FM, nut those are limited to 15 KHz. But do you really care when you are d riving across Texas ? I doubt it. 8 tracks were overtaken by cassettes, but continued in use. What finished t hem off was how badly they ended up slipping. The system they used to ensur e even tape transport was really not ok.

NT

Reply to
tabbypurr

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