Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) Of
Technics SL-1200Mk2/SL-1210Mk2 Turntables.
( [Almost] Everything you ever wanted to know about your 1200 )
Revision 2.2 - January 18, 1994 Copyright (C) 1993,1994 Steve
Valdez - Original page taken from http://www.mio.co.za/article.php?cat=dj&id=238&pagenumber=2
Revision 2.3 - 27th August 2004 : Blue pitch pot image on Figure
5.1.1 added for clarify 2004.
<svaldez@ucsd.edu>
HTML Markup by Steve Waits
<swaits@slab.pr.erau.edu>
New in 2.3:
- minor revisions and information additions... (marked with a ##)
- Cartridge spec list
comments & submissions welcome, corrections wanted.
IMPORTANT: Use this information at your own
discretion -- if you screw up your turntables it isn't my fault. Treat
this FAQ as being purely anecdotal - I won't guarantee accuracy. If you
go ahead though, be sure you have a solid idea of what you are about to
do and observe all electrical precautions where pertinent. You should
have some electronics experience if you open up your deck.
Initially this was going to be only a tweaker FAQ but there isn't
that
much more general stuff so I put it in anyways. This info checks out
on Technics SL-1200Mk2 and SL-1210Mk2 turntables. I haven't looked at
SL-1200Mk3 turntables which are supposed to have improved electronics
over a standard Mk2. The physical stuff will be the same though. Also,
the electrical information applies to the Technics SP-25's (they use
the
same drive electronics/motor). SP-25's are broadcast turntables FYI.
This is all pretty easy stuff but if you need a more detailed
explanation ask for help.
I've given up on the tonearm disassembly - I've done it but you
need pictures to describe how to take it apart/put it back together.
This also includes replacing the locking clip and calibrating the
anti-skate knob as both require extensive disassembly. If I'm in a good
mood I may
try to describe the process in the future.
1.0 - 1200 history
Sometime in the early 70's Technics released the original SL-1200 as a
hi-fi turntable. Then sometime around 1978-79 they did some work
improving the motor, redesigning the casing, adding a separate ground
wire, etc. and released the SL-1200Mark2. This is what the majority of
DJ's have and this design still endures today. The SL-1200Mk2 is the
only version officially authorized for sale in the U.S. by Technics.
The following derivatives are available on the gray market in the U.S.
and are international versions (110/220V). The SL-1210Mk2 is
essentially the 1200Mk2 except in black. Everything else is the same(##
word has it that the 1210 is lighter than the 1200 and is more
susceptible to rumble, etc.). (## To confirm that the 1200 and 1210
Mk2's are the same electronically speaking, the service manuals are
identical for either model.) The SL-1200Mk3 is also in black but is
supposed to have a better motor and other improvements.
The best price on a US version 1200 is from ProSound & Stage
mentioned above in the L.A. area. They sell them for $399. There are a
bunch of places in the L.A. area and in N.Y. which sell (likely
international versions) 1200's and 1210's for around $367. In the LA
area, try Quality Electronics on Santa Monica Blvd. (Hollywood?) or
Astro Sound somewhere in the valley. Get a hold of the L.A. Recycler
for phone #'s... The 1200Mk3 goes for $499 at ProSound & Stage.
These stores probably offer their own warranties as Technics/Matsushita
will not do any kind of warranty work on non-US models.
If you want to find out what region of the world your deck was
destined for look at the SERIAL NUMBER label. This is not the black
label on the back. Some of you don't have this info printed next to
your serial # so you'll be out of luck. Next to the serial number is
the model number: "SL-1200MK2-MC" The "MC" part tells you where it was
destined for:
- M - USA
- MC - Canada
- E - Scandinavia/Switz.
- EK - UK
- XL - Australia
- EG - Germany
- EB - Belgium
- EH - Holland
- EF - France
- Ei - Italy
- XA - The rest of the world (I think they also use XG here)
There are also a few other codes not worth mentioning. An easy way to
tell if it is NOT a US version is to look for the 110/220V switch under
the platter. The other giveaway is a Euro-plug with a US-adapter.
2.0 Tonearms & Cartridges
2.1 Balancing your tonearm
I've seen many differing methods for doing this so I've included
descriptions from others on the ways they do it:
Method #1:
The way I do it with Stanton 500AL's: mount the cartridge in the
headshell pulled almost all the way to the front. Make sure it looks
straight in relation to the headshell when you put it down on the
record - readjust as necessary. Put the height ring at 2.5mm. For most
purposes I reverse the weight on the tonearm, push it all the way
forward and set the anti-skate to the max. If you try scratching and
the needle jumps back a lot turn it down in 1/2-gram increments as
necessary. Pete Ashdown's method below is the same way I set it up for
listening to my collection. Except I put the weight at about 2.25
grams. No coins on either setup. You should really look at your
technique if it skips no matter what you do. I reserve coins for really
bad situations like springy floors. Some may not like the reversal of
the weight but unfortunately, the 500AL's need at least about 3 grams
for scratching, and calibrating it the way you are supposed to get's
you at most about 2.5 grams.
Method #2:
Written by Pete Ashdown
pashdown@slack.sim.es.com
This is what I ended up with on Stanton 680 cartridges.
Use the included weight that comes with the Technics head shells.
Put a record on so you don't damage the needle, then swing it out over
the record. Adjust the weight until it "floats" level above the record.
Turn the weight indicator to "0". Now adjust the height until it is
close to the surface of the record. This was 1.5 for me. Adjust the
weight to 1.5 for just home listening, 3.5 for practicing and
performance. Use an unpressed side of a 12" or a 12" with a large run-
off to set the anti-skate. Put the needle on unpressed vinyl and adjust
the skate (while spinning) so it stands still. On 1.5, it should be
about 1.3. On 3.5, you can't adjust it high enough, so just crank it to
the max.
After much discussion on the bpm mailing list, the consensus on
anti-skate settings is to set it at 0 if you scratch mix or at a number
equal to the weight on the cartridge if you just listen to your records
without touching them... The idea is that the anti-skate mechanism in
the turntable is designed for normal record playing. A side note:
several of the 1200's I have worked on do not have the anti-skate knob
properly calibrated much like two decks with two different speeds at a
scale setting of +1%.
If anyone else has successful balancing techniques that differ
significantly from what has been already described get in contact with
me.
2.2 - Other tonearm/cartridge anecdotes
It's supposed to be a DJ's secret that angling the cartridge inwards a
few degrees (5-15) helps keep the needle in the groove when scratching.
I haven't tried this but if you do be forewarned that this may wear out
your records faster. It would probably be a bad idea to try this with
non-spherical styli as well.
I saw FM20 (QBert et.al. and crew - 1992 DMC champs) perform here
and I noticed that they had their tonearm heights maxed out and were
not using any Stanton carts (xcept for one deck with a 500AL when they
replaced a headshell). There are supposed to be Shure carts perfect for
scratching -- I don't know which ones. Some people set their height
rings to 0 though.
A more accurate way of aligning your cartridge in the headshell is
with a GeoDisc from Mobile Field Sound Labs (?? - they press up those
gold CD's nowadays) probably hard to find but I have one at work.
Some say that the headshells on the 1210's vibrate more than those
on the 1200's but on the 1210 I had for a while it wasn't any different
from the 1200's. My guess is that the adjustments were done less
critically on the 1210's since they aren't 'officially' offered for
sale in North America and much of Europe. Read below if yours does.
2.3 - Which cartridge to get?
- Stanton 500AL's are cheapest, decent, and can take a lot of
abuse. You can run down to Radio Shack and get one in an emergency if
necessary. Be careful not to buy the broadcast versions - make sure the
needle is in WHITE plastic - NOT dark blue. If you get stuck with a
blue one you can buy a replacement styli and replace the blue one. The
model to look for is D5107A. This is the same one RS sells. You can
also replace the styli with the D5107E which gives you the elliptical
stylus.
- Stanton 500EL's are rugged, have a better freq.response over the
straight AL's (due to the elliptical styli) and still relatively cheap.
Basically the same cartridge body as the AL xcept with the D5107E
styli.
- Stanton 680EL's are popular with a lot of people for the
elliptical needle (to help keep the needle in the groove) and for the
slightly better response over the 500's. The 680AL has the spherical
styli on it me thinks.
- There's the new Stanton 890 which costs a lot but which has the
20-20k response. I haven't seen anyone using these...they probably
behave the same as 680's from what I gather. Ortofon's (in general)
look sharp and sound a lot better than Stanton's but are hard to find,
expensive, and you can't put coins on the
- Concorde Pro (xcept maybe if you have Danish coins...). You can't
beat the ease of installation with a C-Pro though.
- There is a Shure line but as mentioned above I'm not familiar
with them at all. (someone needs to fill me in...)
The general feeling I've gotten from bpm and others I've talked with is
to get 500's if you are a scratching DJ, 680's for normal club mixing,
Ortofon's also for club-use with a much better sound.
Vital Specs List:
*******************************************************************
Model(price) TrackForce Stylus FreqRange Separation
******************************************************************
STANTON
500AL 2-5 gm spheri. 20-17kHz 28db
500EL 2-5 gm ellipt. 20-18kHz 30db
680AL 2-5 gm spheri. 20-18kHz 28db
680EL 2-5 gm ellipt. 20-18kHz 30db
890AL 2-7 gm spheri. 20-20kHz 30db
ORTOFON
C-Pro
C-Pro N/C
Concorde
SHURE
I have the specs for all the Stanton stuff, if anyone needs more
specific information other than what is listed get in contact with me.
People with specs on the Ortofon's and Shures's PLEASE get the info to
me!
2.4 - Slipmats
Most people have found the 'wonka' slipmats to be the best. Sorry, I
don't have a source with me. Avoid slipmats which are
printed/silk-screened - they wear off and look bad pretty fast. This
includes those "Technics" slipmats made in Belgium. Either try getting
dyed ones or make your own. Some suggestions to try: felt from the
fabric store, an old record in it's plastic sleeve, thin foam packing
sheets (Like the stuff your 1200 was packed in). Use a piece of paper
to tighten up center holes which are too loose. (put a small piece of
paper on top of the spindle and put the record on top)
3.0 - Disassembly of your 1200
What you'll need for the mods (read text for detail):
- #1 Philips screwdriver
- jewelers philips screwdrivers
- power driver
- multimeter
- soldering iron + solder
- wire
- wire stripper/cutter
- electrical tape or that heat-shrink stuff
3.1 - Removing the top ( for access to the
circuit board )
- unplug the TT, remove the platter, secure the tonearm.
- use a Philips screwdriver to remove the 5 screws holding the
plastic cover under the platter.
3.2 - Removing the rubber base ( access to
tonearm, cue light, power switch, basically everything else. )
- unplug the TT, remove the platter, secure the tonearm.
- There are a few ways of doing this. You can use the hard plastic
dust
cover that came with your TT or you can find a rectangular milk crate.
Or if you have a coffin (or similar case) you could turn it 90degrees
to the way you normally put it in. Turn the deck upside down. If you
use a crate you may want to tape it in place to keep it from falling
in. Be careful with the tonearm.
- remove the feet by unscrewing them.
- Use a power driver (or regular screwdriver) to remove all 21
screws holding the rubber base.
- Be careful with the cables as you pull off the base.
- Remember: the 4 long screws go under the feet, the short screws
with large washers go in the center circle, and the metal screws
(medium length) go along the edges.
4.0 - Advanced Tonearm & Headshell stuff
4.1 - Tightening the suspension on your tonearm
Some TT's have tonearms which seem to be loose. If you grab the tonearm
and pull it gently back and forth and it seems loose you can tighten
it. It shouldn't move at all. A loose suspension can severely affect
it's performance - from jumping needles to binding.
It's pretty easy to tighten the suspension. You'll need a small
flat screwdriver and a large one. Use the large one to loosen the outer
locking screw on the top of the pivot point. Now use the smaller
screwdriver to loosen up the smaller screw. Put a drop of oil where the
bearings are (under that top support on the other end of the adjustment
screw) so that it doesn't bind. Now tighten the small screw slowly
until it just contacts the bearings. Adjust the tightness so the
tonearm doesn't wiggle if you pull on it but leave it loose enough for
the tonearm to pivot freely without binding. Adjust carefully and don't
overtighten otherwise the bearings will be damaged! When done, tighten
up the locking screw.
4.2 - Tightening up the headshell locking ring
Have you put on your headshell, twisted that knurled tightener at the
end of the tonearm as tight as possible and have found that the
headshell still moves around? What will happen is that the headshell
won't sit parallel to the record but may be tilted as a result of
twisting of the headshell. This usually occurs when you change
headshells a lot or if you've had your turntable for a while, and can
contribute to needle jumping so here's what you do to fix it.
First read 3.2 on base disassembly. Remove the
rubber base. There will be this big piece of hard black plastic
covering almost everything. You'll need to remove it. To remove the
tonearm assembly look for three screws (all formerly under that black
plastic) and unscrew them. Be careful not to drop the tonearm when you
remove that last screw!
Now, remove the tonearm assembly from the rest of the 1200, and
look at the bottom of the tonearm where the headshell is put in. There
will be two tiny philips screws there. Get a jewelers screwdriver of
the CORRECT size and tighten those up. Put the headshell on and try
wiggling it to make sure everything is right. Now put your tonearm back
on and close everything back up.
5.0 - Pitch Controls
IMPORTANT: Make sure you have the pitch slider set at
the center (0%) if you make any of the two following adjustments.
Also, the pitch gain on one 1200 is not necessarily the same on
another 1200. Or, a +6 according to the scale on the first 1200 is
probably not the same speed as a +6 according to the scale on the other.
5.1 - Adjustment of pitch gain
Some have said that you can get +-15% pitch gain by doing this but on
the decks that I have tried this on it doesn't get up that high. One
consideration if you try this is that it gets harder to zero in on the
exact speed when mixing beats.
Remove the top panel under the platter as described
above. Look at the upper right hand corner of the PCB.
There will be a colored pot up there (blue - Figure 5.1.1) which says
"pitch" next to it. Use a multimeter on the pot to get a
reference before turning it if you want to get back to where you
started from. (Test for resistance, one clip to the lead facing
the back, the other on the lead to the right. I thhink that the
original factory setting for this resistor is 2.7kOhm) Turning
to the right should increase the gain (greater than +-8%) and vice
versa. The pot is a little touchy when it comes to precision
adjustment. There's a way to get it into factory spec with a
frequency counter but I don't remember how at the moment.

Figure 5.1.1 - The blue
pitch pot.
5.2 - Adjusting the pitch slider to 0% at center
Contrary to (popular?) belief there is no way to lose true 0% pitch
when the slider is in the middle - no matter how you hack it. When in
the middle there is a switch which is thrown which bypasses the pitch
slider and the motor is now crystal locked at the exact speed. But, if
your deck is messed up in this area when you move the slider in the +
direction, for example, it will slow down at first and will then move
to 0 and then will speed up as you move it more in the + direction! In
other words you now have 0 at two places. So this is for reference if
you need to get your pitch slider so that 0 is really in the center. Open up the base, look where the pitch pot is. There
will be a hole about 3-5mm in diameter where you can see a small pot on
the other side. Hook up a multimeter to that pot (again, connect to the
center lead and the one nearest the edge of the board I think) and use
a small adjustment screwdriver to adjust it to 2.7kOhm.
6.0 - Other Hacks / Fixes
6.1 - Adjustment of braking
Doing this you can get your decks to brake hard enuff to make it spin
backwards when you hit STOP. Most decks have this set correctly but if
yours isn't then you can do this. Pop open the top as
described, and look for pot VR201 - It's on the right side next to
the blue pitch pot described above and says "brake" next to it. Turn it
to the right to increase the braking time. I suggest you just nudge it
a little to the right and see what happens by placing the platter back
on and playing with the start/stop button. Make sure you unplug the
turntable from the wall before taking off the platter again. Note that
it takes slightly more force to stop a platter w/record vs. an empty
platter.
6.2 - Eliminating the ground wire
This may work only with certain setups -- to be sure: use a multimeter
and do a continuity check between the ground screw on the back of your
mixer/pre-amp/whatever and the outer conductor of the RCA jack inputs.
Check both channels. Not all systems share a common ground. If it does,
remove the rubber base from your TT. Remove the screws to the plastic
stress clip for the cable coming out from under the tonearm.
Dissasemble the clip. Remove the two screws holding down the round
plate. Move it out of the way. Use two short lengths of wire and solder
both to the ground tab the current wire is connected to. Solder the end
of one wire to the shield of one channel in the audio cable where it is
soldered to the PCB, and do the same for the other wire and channel.
You can desolder and remove the old ground wire if you want. (I left
mine on just in case) You may not want to do this mod if you are using
different mixers constantly.
6.3 - Changing the pop-up lights
- remove the base as described above.
- remove the two screws holding the whole light fixture from
beneath.
- Use a jewelers screwdriver ( with the rotating tops so you can
apply pressure while turning ) to remove the small screw at the bottom
of the metal cylinder where the bulb is. Make sure to get a correct
size screwdriver as some decks have this really torqued in. (read
below)
- If you are a DIYer it's a ~20VDC bulb. Be careful here or you may
kill your turntable (12-14v bulbs won't work - they glow faintly when
the cylinder is down and burn out too quickly - they sure are bright
though) You'll need the right size too, some may need a slight
modification to fit--use the soldering iron to burn off some of the
glue at the base.
If you aren't a DIYer you'll want to read
this:
From: Dario Alcocer alcocer@adoc.xerox.com
...As far as the replacement bulb was concerned, I
played no games; I
contacted an electronics shop in Oakland that's an authorized
Panasonic/Matsushita dealer, and ordered _two_ lamps (just in case I
messed up). I ordered them, and they arrived via UPS 3 days latter. I
think the lamps were kind of pricey, around $4.95 each. By the way,
If anyone needs it, I have a list of authorized dealers that I can
e-mail
or fax to you.
[EdNote: It's Cass Electronics in Oakland,CA and the part number is
SFDN122-01 : "Lamp, stylus illuminator" ]
- Using a small precision (jeweler's) screwdriver, remove the
polished aluminium shell to expose the bulb.
[This is where you have to be a little careful and patient.
Since the screw was torqued in pretty good from the factory, what I did
was used a pair of pliers to turn the screwdriver, while pushing down
firmly to keep it from stripping the screw head. Since the screw is
pretty small (and easily stripped), MAKE SURE you have a screwdriver
that fits the screw EXACTLY; even if you have to go 40 miles to a store
to buy the right screwdriver, do it. After all, if you paid nearly $400
US to buy a 1200, don't cheat yourself by buying a cheap screwdriver
that can damage it.]
- Remove the bulb from the lamp housing and clip it off from the
two wires as close to lamp as possible. You'll want to leave enough
wire left over, just in case the bulbs you get don't have long enough
leads.
- Solder (or twist) the wires of the bulb to the corresponding
wires coming from the turntable.
[EdNote: Make sure you use electrical tape or shrink tubing on
each wire
when done!]
Insert the new bulb into the lamp housing and re-attach the
polished aluminium shell.
Re-install the lamp unit into the turntable. Before you replace
the bottom rubber base, test the pop-up switch to make sure that the
bulb leads won't get caught. If there is too much spare wire, you'll
either remove the excess or just tuck it out of the way.
Replace the bottom rubber base, and install the four rubber
feet. Connect power cord, and make sure the light bulb lights and pops
up cleanly.
This whole procedure should only take 10-15 minutes at the most. Best
of all, if you have the right tools (precision screwdriver, regular
Phillips screwdriver, and a set of pliers) it should be an easy thing
to do.
6.4 - Fixing the power switch when the knob comes
off
Have you ever lost the shaft -- when you happen to twist the black knob
right off? If you turn your TT upside down it won't come back so you'll
need to do this: remove the base as described above
and look where the power switch is. Push the shaft back up and reattach
the black knob. You may want to put a drop of glue in the knob
center/bottom before replacing it to help prevent this. Or you could
just tape down the knob and use a power strip to turn your TT on and
off.
Remember, comments/submissions are always welcome. If there are
errors let me know.
-Steve Valdez
Steve Valdez <svaldez@ucsd.edu>
for <rgmag@media.mit.edu>
Copyright (C) 1993,1994 Steve Valdez
<svaldez@ucsd.edu>
HTML Markup by Steve Waits
<swaits@slab.pr.erau.edu>
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