^^^ Only just seen thisLee S wrote:For £12 you could get a Lenco GL75 which is a damn site less complex and finnicky than a Garrard and IMHO sounds better anyway......![]()

Big up the Goldring/Lenco Massiff.

DTB (a.k.a.) Da Gee NinetyNine
^^^ Only just seen thisLee S wrote:For £12 you could get a Lenco GL75 which is a damn site less complex and finnicky than a Garrard and IMHO sounds better anyway......![]()
Sounds good. Where do you suggest we and in particular Thomas access' that very useful service?DewiSant wrote:If a weight has hit it on the face and has actually dented through to the back all you need is it being laid on a polished steel surface and put under a hydraulic press - if one used a (for arguments sake) fifty ton press with a 3" diameter ram and on the inside of the platter place a smaller, say 1/2" diameter piece of steel right on top of the dent then the tonnage you can apply in that one place is phenomenal
eyes down look in for a full houseGreg wrote:Sounds good. Where do you suggest we and in particular Thomas access' that very useful service?DewiSant wrote:If a weight has hit it on the face and has actually dented through to the back all you need is it being laid on a polished steel surface and put under a hydraulic press - if one used a (for arguments sake) fifty ton press with a 3" diameter ram and on the inside of the platter place a smaller, say 1/2" diameter piece of steel right on top of the dent then the tonnage you can apply in that one place is phenomenal
Actually, I don't think you are getting what is required here, but I'm happy to eat my words if you can explain adequately. Please have a go!
if the underside of the platter has been machined then the only way of ensuring it's 'truth' is with ground flat surface again with engineers blue - cover the ground plate with a thin film of blue and check it outthomas wrote:I had the inner surface of the platter checked for tolerances on a lathe- the chap doing it knew his stuff! The ding on the 'outside' actually didn't distort the inner surface...
My suspicions have moved on to the idler wheel; I must admit the Garrard is in my loft presently as a spare, but I've been waiting a while for a cheapie substitute to show up on epay!
OOh cheeky!!Nah! You're all wrong, Thomas has solved the problem by bunging it in the loft (where they belong...) and buying an SL1200 which is a lot better anyway.
you would need two dies an inner and an outerNick wrote:Instead of just saying the problem was not understood, maybe explaining the problem would help.
Its my understanding the dint was on the outside of the rim of the platter, ie the curved part, so I don't think a simple press would help as you would need a female part to the die that matched the curviture of platter circumferance.
In general though I think small (50 tonne) presses are quiet common and used for general enginearing and motor repair.
Yep, sort of goes without sayingDewiSant wrote: you would need two dies an inner and an outer