The tape mechanism might be the same as the realistic TR-801. On the backside of the motor between the motor and the back wood panel is a u shaped bracket with a circuit board behind the bracket, small board like an inch by inch. You have to remove the u shaped bracket and There’s a speed adjust pot on the circuit board.
@ thats a nice unit, hope you can get it figured out. Btw, on the plastic bracket for the Craig. On my tr-802 I used an xacto knife to put small vertical slots(just enough to let wire sit down into, not to deep) on all 4 corners of the head bracket, then wrapped thin wire around the screw on top, and then down and around the bracket back to the screw on the top. Used superglue on the wire at the corners to keep it in place in the cut slots.
The tape mechanism might be the same as the realistic TR-801. On the backside of the motor between the motor and the back wood panel is a u shaped bracket with a circuit board behind the bracket, small board like an inch by inch. You have to remove the u shaped bracket and There’s a speed adjust pot on the circuit board.
@@ronwilgenbusch1961 idk because the TR-801 has the plastic head bracket and this does not.
@ the TR-802 has the plastic bracket, I have one that I fixed. I believe the 801 was still the metal bracket.
@ I had an 802 years ago but I’m not sure about the 801, but that’s interesting
@ thats a nice unit, hope you can get it figured out. Btw, on the plastic bracket for the Craig. On my tr-802 I used an xacto knife to put small vertical slots(just enough to let wire sit down into, not to deep) on all 4 corners of the head bracket, then wrapped thin wire around the screw on top, and then down and around the bracket back to the screw on the top. Used superglue on the wire at the corners to keep it in place in the cut slots.
@ interesting. I tried using a wire on mine but it’s still unstable