The tops of the two arms should be the same height and that height should be 19.5mm from the top of the Beogram platter. So the fixed arm needs to be adjusted up and the tonearm needs to be adjusted down.
To make all of the necessary adjustments I have to get to the underside of the tonearm carriage assembly. That means removing the rails and the tangential drive screw. I have to do this anyway to clean and re-apply some lubrication.
The red arrow in this picture shows the adjustment screw for the tops of the arms (the horizontal parallelism adjustment). The green arrow is for the vertical parallelism adjustment (the gap between the two arms). I am pointing that out as it turned out I needed to adjust it as well.
After adjusting the horizontal parallelism I got both arms to the 19.5mm height from the platter surface.
I installed a new tangential arm drive belt.
I also cleaned and checked the lubrication of the platter hub. The following pictures show the Beogram from platter hub removed to the sub-platter re-installed. I was able to find a spare tonearm assembly cover trim piece. The original one was missing from this turntable and the wires were exposed.
When I put the top platter back on and connected the main board the tonearm and platter worked okay but I noticed something was not right with the tonearm. When the Beogram 8002 tonearm is at rest you should be able to push the arm towards the fixed arm and have it spring right back to centered position when you let go. With this tonearm I was detecting an obstruction that was hindering the spring back action.
I was concerned at first because I couldn't see anything wrong. The vertical parallelism looked correct. I took a peek into the tangential arm tracking sensor assembly.
Note the spring clip in the picture below. That spring mechanism moves the tonearm back to a centered position when you move the tonearm away from the fixed arm.
Everything was fine in there. Nothing was scraping.
I finally realized the tonearm vertical parallelism adjustment screw was the problem. It had been adjusted incorrectly. While the gap between the fixed arm and tonearm looked fine, the tonearm raise/lowering bar was not operating correctly in the V-shaped channel of the brass adjustment screw.
The following picture of one of my own Beogram 8002 turntables shows the tonearm lift/lowering bar and the V-Channel adjustment screw. The lift bar has a spring mechanism that will attempt to keep the bar pressed down on the V-channel when the arm is in the raised position (not playing). If you manually move the tonearm towards the fixed arm the lift bar rides up one side of the V-channel. When you let go the tonearm should pivot back to a centered position as the spring loaded lift bar returns to the bottom of the V-channel.
On this Beogram 8002 project turntable the lift bar was getting slightly stuck at the top of the V-channel screw when the tonearm was moved towards the fixed arm. By re-adjusting the V-channel screw (which is the vertical parallelism adjustment screw) I was able to get the tonearm back to its normal, springy self.
The tonearm and fixed arms are also vertically parallel to each other.
I test played one complete side of a record and observed the linear tracking working correctly as the stylus remained always centered. I could see the tangential arm assembly motor adjusting the tonearm position pretty much ever half turn of the record. Very nice results after all of that disassembly/reassembly of the Beogram mechanics.
The last check I wanted to make was the voltage level of the light driven sensor in the control panel. This is for the Beogram forward/fast forward and reverse/fast reverse function. After the Beogram has been operating for at least five minutes the voltage of the forward/reverse sensor should be around 620mVDC in its normal state. This check is done my monitoring control panel connector P5-4 to P5-3 (ground) and P5-6 to P5-3 (ground). To adjust the sensor voltage levels there are two screws on the control panel that operate an aperture for the sensor lamp source as seen in the picture below.
The procedure requires checking the voltages at both test points a few times as each screw is adjusted. Each adjustment screw can affect the measurement at both test points. After a few iterations I got the sensor to a satisfactory level.
Tomorrow I will re-assembly the Beogram 8002 (except for the dust cover lids) and do some actual record playing testing.
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