My daily driver is a 1928 Model A "Fordor" sedan. I tried putting in a CD  
player a few years ago but the vibration of the car caused it to skip. If I can 
 
ever find tiny speakers that have adequate volume and sound quality I'd love 
to  just stick an Ipod Shuffle behind the dash panel and load it up with 
period  music...
 
Best regards,
Rene Rondeau



************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
From [email protected]  Sun Jun 24 19:30:45 2007
From: [email protected] (Ron L'Herault)
Date: Sun Jun 24 19:32:17 2007
Subject: [Phono-L] tape residue
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <002d01c7b6d0$da006420$2f01a...@ronlherault>

GooGone should work.  It is not fast and you may have to rub a bit but if it
is a nickel plated arm you won't rub off the nickel in your lifetime.

Ron L

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Richard Rubin
Sent: Sunday, June 24, 2007 9:08 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Phono-L] tape residue

Greetings, everyone.  I just picked up a nice old Victrola, in which someone

had duct taped the tone arm down at some point to keep it (I assume) from 
swinging around.  They left the tape on for many years, and though it has 
since been removed, there is a wide band of tape residue on the arm.  
Naturally, I'm looking to remove this residue while preserving the arm's 
original finish.  What is the best and/or easiest way of doing so?  Thanks 
in adance for your ideas.

--RR


_______________________________________________
Phono-L mailing list
http://phono-l.oldcrank.org


Reply via email to