James wrote:Hi.
The bezel or front cover of the reproducer, close to the needle holder, there is a part of the bezel, that bent down to touch the needle bar. I think it give more pressure to the needle bar to muted it little, it should be just right to get the right sound. I tried to bend up very slightly, noticed no difference, if there was, negligible. I was just doing an experiment. Please do not perform this because I am not sure the purpose of the bent down end of the bezel that touches the needle bar. If someone can verify, please come up. Then I said to myself, if it is not broken, why do you fix it.
Larry
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I think this tiny projection or tab in the lower middle of the bezel was meant to be very close to the needle bar, but not to touch it. Its function was to prevent it from getting moved too roughly and damaging the diaphragm. Thus it was Brunswick's answer to the stop screw found on the Victor Orthophonic soundbox. Over time, things could get out of alignment (maybe through gasket shrinkage?) so that the bezel came closer to the needle bar and the little tab actually touched the needle bar. That was the case with my reproducer, and it caused buzzing on loud passages, especially in the treble. I gently nudged the tab a TINY bit away from the needlebar using an eyeglass screwdriver, taking care not to do too much at a time. You really only want to get the tab about 1/32" away from the needlebar, so that they're not touching when at rest, and won't touch when the needlebar moves during the loudest passages of playing a record. It makes the buzzing and distortion go away like magic. (The last thing you want in a soundbox is two pieces of metal buzzing against each other.)