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In Reply to: RE: Scott 4310 posted by fwestern753 on March 08, 2012 at 11:34:11
This what I would perform. Mark each tube to the respective socket. I would vaccum the chassis with a brush attachment. Next, I would use those color dots (like for pricing items in a sales shop) that are sticky on one side and cover the tube sockets. One does not need any debris or moisture in tube sockets. Finally I would wipe the chassis clean with a slightly damp cloth that does not have enough moisture to cause a drip.
BTW- that tuner is a big deal!
Follow Ups:
Thank you . I do not want to take off the lettering. I have had problems
cleaning up a Fisher unit awhile back.
I have sold off most of my tuners but I got the bug when I saw this one.
Beauty! Just don't tell me you got it at Goodwill for $10 :-). Dynacos have the same problem with fragile lettering. On several of those I have used Blue Magic which is a very mild metal polish and did not remove the lettering. You might want to try a small area with a Q-tip or better yet, try it on a similar unit of less value. Enjoy!
With this tuner you do not need any others. Running in spec it leaves the Marantz 10b in the dust other than the bling of owning a 10b. I love the Scott rotary dial units.
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