I thought it would be interesting to find out what people do for 
slipping belts since this is a fairly common problem.  You can obviously 
tighten the belt but that will affect play if it gets too tight and 
doesn't always solve the problem.  Some people put a coating on the back 
side of the belt to prevent slipping.  Auto stores sell a stick to stop 
fan belts from slipping but it depends on heating by friction to apply 
it.  What solutions do you use?

Ken Danckaert
From rich-m...@octoxol.com  Mon Feb 26 06:08:43 2007
From: rich-m...@octoxol.com (Rich)
Date: Mon Feb 26 06:08:58 2007
Subject: [Phono-L] Slipping belts
In-Reply-To: <45e2e6ba.5050...@lemur.org>
Message-ID: <20070226140847.bf6028b...@mail.intellitechcomputing.com>

The belt on which phonograph?  Leather flat belt, light sanding with REAL sand 
paper.  The sheet will 
say that it is FLINT paper.  Still slips, then it is shot, throw it in the 
trash.


On Mon, 26 Feb 2007 08:55:06 -0500, Ken Danckaert wrote:

>I thought it would be interesting to find out what people do for 
>slipping belts since this is a fairly common problem.  You can obviously 
>tighten the belt but that will affect play if it gets too tight and 
>doesn't always solve the problem.  Some people put a coating on the back 
>side of the belt to prevent slipping.  Auto stores sell a stick to stop 
>fan belts from slipping but it depends on heating by friction to apply 
>it.  What solutions do you use?

>Ken Danckaert
>_______________________________________________
>Phono-L mailing list
>http://phono-l.oldcrank.org



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