Aiwa CA-30 Stereo Compo System - October 2018

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Nickeccles

Member (SA)
Greetings From A Slightly Crazy Boombox Collector!! :D :D :D



Well, after last months Aiwa CA-R80 Compo System sarger I wondered if I could maybe find a similar Aiwa compo with a single direction cassette deck.............



Just two days & very little money later - This little fellow arrived well packed & exactly as described by seller!! A good start I mused as I inspected my newly acquired Aiwa CA-30 Stereo Compo System! It had a broken handle but all the parts had been kept & wrapped up seperately!! The handle had a spring missing that tensions the steel locking tab that locks the handle to the main unit! This arrangement also locks the two speakers solidly to the stereo! The other end of the handle was fine & a quick flash of inspiration led me to the scrap machine cupboard & a mini that I bought to save another - One battery spring removed, cut & shaped to fit the handle's end cavity & push the latch inwards - After a couple of days in a warm cupboard & taped tightly together to make sure the glue had bonded really tightly, it was functioning as intended & now locked firmly on to the stereo!! I just had to repair the handle as soon as I unpacked it while the idea was fresh in my now slowly failing brain! (Brain Stem Stroke in March 2013) Memory is fine from the past but often simple tasks become a nightmare & things go wrong :( :( Anyway I digress.........We now had a working handle if nothing else :D :D



Later that day, I began opening up the main unit wondering fervently that I hadn't shot myself in the leg with this one!


I was already a little despondant after battling with a huge Goldstar TSR-950 the past few days & losing the battle for now.........I thought that this machine would be a piece of pie & that I would soon finish it!! That is of course another story & a later post!!

Once inside the Aiwa I quickly & easily removed the cassette deck mechanism - All pluggable connectors & a really great design - well built & a delight to work on! :) :) :)
Everything going swim well.............until I saw the remains of the two rubber belts!! A real mess so time to take a short break for a tumbler full of ice cold orange pop & a small cakey thing - You can't beat that Dr Kipling :) :)
Nicely refreshed & recharged it was time to break out the surgical spirit & old cloths & remove all of the dreaded sludge from both sides of the mechanism! That took me over an hour to get it really clean & ready for rebelting............
The very large flywheel is driven by a flat belt & the reel drive is via a square belt that goes under the flywheel the same level as the reel drive pulley - So easy to rebelt you would surmise.........Well the reel belt is very easy to fit leaving just the flatty to go around the motor pulley & flywheel!!
This was one part of the repair that elicited a lot of very rude expletives as you have to do a balancing act with the top plate, motor pulley & belt at the same time! :O :O :O

This took me a good half hour to get right (First time in the years before the stroke) & the belt despite being a perfect match had other ideas!! Once on I was able to take a break & hope that whatever followed would be easy sailing for me!!
A cursary run through manually confirmed that the soft touch mechanism was doing everything correctly which was a great feeling & was no longer all caught up in the tentyhooks & swearing at the cassette deck!!

Time to turn to the electronics now - All switches & pots were dirty to the point of virtually no operation or audio at all............
A new can of service oil was brandished, the hopelessly unreliable "Straw" attached to it's nozzle & I was ready to take it to "The Next Level" whatever the fook that means!! I forgot to mention that every stage of this repair was "Key" - isn't everything these days??

"It's OK - I've Got This" I announced to myself as the switch cleaner penetrated every hole & orifice in sight! (I knew a girl like that once with the similar preferences - Another time & another story perhaps!!) I noticed that the volume pot was almost stuck but it soon moved as easily as all the other controls after being worked with cleaner!!

This was turning out to be a long evening, so I put it all aside until the following afternoon.............

Refreshed & all ready to continue "My Journey" I cued up the media server & continued as some great songs flowed out of my Wharfendale Xarus 5000 floorstanders! (I know I spelt it wrong - Long story) The bass from these monsters is tremendous, even at low volumes, bass rolls out of these effortlessly & although spiked & on a solid concrete floor, it is still deep tight & you can feel it!! I love these speakers! :)
Anyway, back to the patient the Aiwa compo...........

So yesterday it was time to drop the cassette mechanism back into the chassis, plug in my headphones & apply power..............

Well - Instead of being left looking like a melon I was delighted as everything just worked - What a great result & maybe I can still repair audio & Hi-Fi after all???
By now, all that remained was to clean up the empty one piece front & sides casing plus the silver knobs & switch caps which was easy taking less that an hour to get it all gleaming!! :p :p

Reassemble & fit speakers (Also polished up) then clip handle on the top & this little guy is ready sing again for many years to come.........

The Sound?? - Very typical Aiwa sound from 1984/85, rich powerful sound with excellent soundstage & stereo separation! The superb cassette deck with it's huge flywheel delivers a very solid stable sound, the tuner too is very good indeed with good sensitivity!! The soft touch controls & music search also work faultlessly...........I have most certainly not bitten myself in the foot with this one - What a great stereo & I felt at that moment that I had indeed, caught up with the even keels as I sat in front of it & just played lots of different tapes on it testing it for any faults of which there were none!! :)

Time to show off my Aiwa CA-30 Stereo Compo System!

Headphones or decent speakers mandatory to hear it at it's best! Stereo recording........

Et Viola:






https://youtu.be/qZlxdrKa0X4

https://youtu.be/MCUj7l0Re0c

Hi-Res Images Here:

https://onedrive.live.com/?id=BEA218B70F2B18D1%2131747&cid=BEA218B70F2B18D1
 

Radio raheem

Requiem Æternam
great work lad, i have 2 ca 70 and love em, actually i can't remember when i last used them lol...wish i had all these things to look forward to but i think my box buying days are over...anyway great work dude

i will say this it's been fun but im happy with 2 sony fh 909 conion killers lol
 

MyOhMy

Member (SA)
Good job and well done! I like this model, as well as many other Aiwa models of the same era, and recently acquired a CA-30 but returned it due to a dodgy FM tuning issue. It's good to see another of your resto's giving such great results. :rock:
 

PostEnder

Member (SA)
Rats. This past Thursday, I was going to post this nice, somewhat extended message about this handsomely restored Aiwa CA-30 that Nick Eccles shares with us in one of his characteristically extensive, pictorially detailed topic posts.

And then I lost it all! Something went wrong when I activated "Open File" in my desktop's app to compare the pre-repair cassette-deck mechanism of my Aiwa CS-600U to the now-repaired tape-deck mechanism of Mr Eccles' three-piece stereo when it happened: I lost the screen where I was composing the message and, despite several desperate tries, I couldn't get it back. (Grrr...)

Anyway, Nick Eccles: looks delightful, and certainly sounds the part.

Now, while I doubt that I can ID the jam playing from the TDK CD-ing II cassette in the first video clip, the second song is another matter. I think that it was under twenty minutes of online checking that told me that the song playing from the Maxell SQ 90 first seen in photo' 10 is "Moviestar," the title track of the 1975 album by Harpo. (Remember another Seventies hit of his, "In The Zum-Zum-Zummernight"? Fortunately I seem to have correctly spelled the song title. And, ah, those '70s-typifying shades of his ...)

That Thursday, I discovered that chap appears to have been born Jan Torsten Svensson in 1950 in Stockholm, Sweden. According to the info' uploaded by 2Shaymcn with a YouTube video clip of "Moviestar" (one word), perhaps Anni-Frid "Frida" Lyngstad sang backup vocals on "Moviestar." (Presumably even while being a busy member of ABBA.)

Time has brought change -- such as a beard, which he lacked back in the day -- for our man Harpo.

But anyway, My Eccles, you did well in restoring this Aiwa CA-30 (aside from the raft of "very rude expletives" :blush:). It's one of various Aiwas that I've desired in recent years, albeit without longwave. (Yes, Europe still has a broadcast LW band, but two shortwave bands can only just tune a few listenable vocal broadcasts in America without the aid of fine-tuning, let alone one SW band SMH) The thing is, anything from a busted cassette-deck mechanism to intense prices always got in my way.

But, my missed "scores" aside, enjoy the music.
 

deech

Member (SA)
This Aiwa Combo is so classic !! Nick , well done on saving it. I have one in black and i love it. :yes:
 
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