a funny anectode about a TOTALLY clueless guy I've recently met on an italian facebook group about cassettes...
The guy had a very old mono shoebox recorder, a very rare early 70's model from the japanese brand Silvano, so rare that there isn't even a picture of it on the whole internet.
The guy only wished to put a new capstan belt and realign the speed, because it did run very slow after putting a new belt on...
So, seeing the bad and dangerous advices he was getting there in the group, I simply replied him to do NOTHING and to rely on a proper technician.
A couple days later, the guy did write me a private message by explaining that the recorder didn't work anymore and that he had opened the motor.
At first, I was simply trying to give him a few advices through messenger but I've soon realized that the guy was so clueless that he didn't even have a voltmeter to check voltages... so, to avoid that he got electrocuted while working on that recorder, I told him to send me the recorder so that I would have checked what was going wrong.
When the recorder came here and gave it a look, I was really shocked...
The guy, after opening the motor, upon rebuilding it, he soldered the motor's wires while putting so much solder that he did short the positive on the motor's chassis... but he was lucky because he had re-soldered the other end of the wire (going to a small PCB) with both wires wound together and soldered on the same place... so, the bad short he made on the motor side wasn't really a short on the PCB/supply side but it was simply like a disconnected wire. (he was just lucky!)
Then I opened the motor and found that he had bent the brushes... that motor was a very robust model and so I was able to get it running again...
So, the motor worked again... and it was a motor where you cannot tune the speed (I had not investigated if the speed tuning trimmer was somewhere on the PCB though)... anyways, it did run slow because that mechanism wanted a square belt of 1.2 mm thickness and he had put a walkman belt of 0.6 mm thickness which wasn't just able to turn the capstan flywheel properly... so, I've put a 1.2 mm thick belt on it and the speed was just quite OK.
Then, by trying to play a tape (luckily a not important tape) , I've noticed the tape got damaged... the old pinch roller was totally gone... then I've replaced the pinch roller with a new one... but the deck did still ruin the tape...
So, I've checked the tape path with a M300 gauge and it was off quite everywhere...
At that point, before going to touch the heads' screws, I wrote a message to the guy asking if he had also touched the heads' screws... If he didn't, I would have kept into consideration that one was the factory alignment, even if it looked wrong... but he did actually touch the head screws too (why not?
)...
But, since I was telling him, step by step, all the unneded rookie errors and damages he did on that recorder, he felt sort of offended and replied to me that, to tell him so clearly what I've found out about his "fixing attempt" I was being not that much polite and he also told me that, regardless of the damages he had done on it, since I had offered to fix it (and I was doing that for free!) , it was my own responsibility and not his own anymore....
So, after hearing about this, I simply packed the damned thing as it was, without finishing to fix it, and putting back the old original pinch roller and the wrong walkman belt he had put on it and sent it back to him.
So, not only the guy did not listen to my own initial advice to NOT TOUCH IT but to send it to a proper technician, not only he wasn't telling me "thank you" because I was trying to explain all the damages he did on it, not only I was doing all of that for free... he also implied that the responsibility for his own damages was mine, since I accepted to work in it... then, a HUGE F#@K OFF to him and his stupid recorder was just the minimum from my side.
Go figure... this is just to give you an idea about all the pointless morons around lately, who believe that to be a technician is sufficient to own a screwdriver and a crappy chinese soldering iron and that knowledge and experience are not important at all.