F
fgonza2
New member
Hi, I have a noisy and fluttery capstan on my MS16, how hard is to replace the bearings on that motor ? has anyone done this ?
thanks
thanks
Hi Felipe,
Well, it looks like we have another Cory on the board. I say that with the greatest admiration for your work. Cory is one of the most meticulous people you'll probably ever see. And like Cory does with his gear, it appears that you are doing an outstanding job of rehabilitaing your MS-16. I know that its a lot of work.
Did you happpen to print tones and do a log sheet on the tones and the corresponding track output levels for referrence?
It is hard to believe that anyone would ever run anything called a recording studio with a machine in the condition yours was in when you bought it. What a pig that guy must be. I doubt most people would be comfortable even walking into such filthy place as his must be.
I was not aware that you knew about Tom but he is first class. My brother bought his MCI JH24 and JH110 from Tom after he had rebuilt them. I had him relap the head stack on my MS-16. The heads are beautiful and record and playback to spec.
What's the deal with the heads on your machine ? Are you planning to have them evaluated at least ? From your pictures, it appears there is a flat spot on them. That could possibly have something to do with setting up the tape path error if they are oblique or scewed.
I know that this stuff is expensive. Always has been. But the good news is that a machine like yours with full options was well over $12k even at the end of the production run. I was there when they were new and had to wait years before I could afford one. They are a workhorse and sound awesome when set up properly. And it will happily lock to and chase your DAW with the right equipment. And regardless what others say, the DBX does a good job but you MUST record at the specified levels.
Best,
Danny