Vintage DD turntables. Are we living dangerously?


I have just acquired a 32 year old JVC/Victor TT-101 DD turntable after having its lesser brother, the TT-81 for the last year.
TT-101
This is one of the great DD designs made at a time when the giant Japanese electronics companies like Technics, Denon, JVC/Victor and Pioneer could pour millions of dollars into 'flagship' models to 'enhance' their lower range models which often sold in the millions.
Because of their complexity however.......if they malfunction.....parts are 'unobtanium'....and they often cannot be repaired.
128x128halcro
rw, Thank you for doing the legwork to unearth the fact that it is the SL1300, and perhaps not the SL1500 or SL1600, that utilizes the MN6042 chip also necessary in an SP10 Mk3.  Sorry for my alphanumeric error.  I was going on second-hand info received from a fellow Mk3 enthusiast.

Totem, Please do keep us posted.  I am a buyer.

I am also thinking hard about sending my Victor TT101 to Germany so that Thuchan's guy can fix it, once and for all.  I got an email from Thuchan today; he is thrilled with the sound of his TT101.  This is a guy who owns some of the most expensive turntables in the world, so I take his praise for the TT101 very seriously.


The MN6042 is used in the MK2 versions of the SL-1300/1400/1500/150, the SP-15, SP-10 MK3, and SP-02.  

Lewm: not millions by any stretch.  The nominal frequency through the pitch chip is 262.080KHz.  This is also where I'm seeing ~8Hz variation across the three samples I measured.  

The output of the pitch chip is delivered to the DN860, which divides by 1/8, then 1/54 for 33RPM, and then 1/12 to the AN660 chip.  The "quartz locked" frequency for 33RPM is 50.5555Hz, which is the frequency the AN660 uses to develop the reference and error control lines to the motor drive. 

For perspective, the AN660 sees 50.5555Hz for 33RPM at 0.0% pitch, and 50.6061Hz for 33RPM +0.1% pitch from 262.080KHz.  262.074KHz is 50.5543Hz to the AN660, and 262.081KHz is 50.5557Hz at 0.0%.

Theoretically instability in the reference frequency should manifest as a voltage instability in the reference line to the motor drive.  We'd then need to determine how the motor control would react to the degree of variation induced.  My theory is this would work in concert with the offset voltage adjustment; tighter control of the reference voltage would allow the drive to be more critically damped. 

When I get the next revision of boards in I'll put the motor on the bench and measure through the entire system.  I haven't managed to find a test record anywhere close to the quality needed to reliably measure flutter below 0.02% JIS, so my conclusion on whether the increased stability of my chip replacement equates to anything of note at the platter may be based upon a bit of conjecture. 

Worst case, it's designed to be a modern, resilient drop-in replacement for any circuit that uses an MN6042.  Best case, we've made things a bit better in a meaningful way.

I do plan on making it available, as I'd love to have a shot at recouping some of the R&D costs.  It's amazing how fast things add up.  As the largest component on the board is a 4x4mm 20 pin package with no leads, I wouldn't offer it as a kit.   Please PM for info. 

JP


 
As a MK3 owner myself it was interesting for me too. There's still many IC's inside the MK3 though. Aren't they just as important?

I just bought a JVC QL-F6 that is supposed to be in good working order. Hope so.
http://www.thevintageknob.org/jvc-QL-F6.html