I needed a quick repair - would this Sansui fit the bill?
After a series of lengthy repairs I was getting behind in my video schedule and needed a quick fix. I'd been sitting on this vintage Sansui CD-E70 CD player for a couple of months after a channel viewer donated it and thought now was the time to look at it. It had symptoms I'd seen before in Toshiba players - no display and a constantly running disc motor. This was no coincidence because it was soon apparent that Toshiba made this unit for Sansui, and in fact it was identical inside to the XR-35 that gave me so many problems a few months ago. I suspected a shorted capacitor this time, but it turned out that those aren't the only thing to cause the behaviour I was seeing. Outro music: Calvary by TrackTribe

▶︎
More thrift store CD player finds! Can I repair all four?

▶︎
A tale of two Sanyos

▶︎
Getting my HALO back! - Parasound's A52

▶︎
LaserDisc - it's never too late

▶︎
The Kyocera DA-910 - from show stopper to door stopper

▶︎
Teac PD-100 revisit: don't judge a CD player by its cover

▶︎
The Toshiba XR-35 and the Curse of Gabriel

▶︎
ASMR Addictive Fast Tapping Collection For Deep Sleep & Anxiety Relief (No Talking) — 2.5 Hours

▶︎
Pioneer PD-M6: just when I thought I'd tried everything...

▶︎
Restoring a 1969 German-Made Turntable

▶︎
Fastest fix ever? The unusual Realistic CD-2300

▶︎
The Sears own brand CD player that's surprisingly brilliant

▶︎
Let's fix some water damage! Technics SA 700 Restoration

▶︎
This Apple IIgs repair got really weird

▶︎
Pioneer VSX-909 Blown Output Repair

▶︎
This Teac CD player looks like it was built in the dark

▶︎
The most messed up CD player I've ever encountered?

▶︎
Fixing an ABANDONED CRT TV from the '80s! Goldstar CMX-4120 Resurrection.

▶︎
Calibrating a Nakamichi CD Player 4... using a custom test jig

▶︎
