Pioneer RT 909 Tape Recorder | Reel to Reel

Additional Info

A Swiss rebuild/renovation of the RT-909 

Here’s a very decent Service Summary that seems to be widely circulated on the Internet. We have included some part numbers and sources to make it more accessible.

– Perform a complete initial functional test, to determine if there are any repair operations need to be performed before restoration, and to provide a baseline for comparison with post-restoration performance.

– Replace both pinch rollers (for some reason, all RT-909 original pinch rollers are gooey/gummy at this age), and adjust the pinch roller pressure. Rollers are still available from Pioneer at a reasonable cost. Oaktreevintage.com
Terry’s rollers – pinch roller rebuild $75.00 for 2
Vintage Electronics – $64.00 for 2 pinch rollers
The Pioneer part number is ?

Replace the capstan drive belt, also still available from Pioneer. Here’s an alternative source for the Capstan Flywheel Belt FBL14.5 

Replace the felt brake pads (felt brake pads that are almost 30 years old probably have dried out adhesive, and may appear to work, but we are shooting for another 20-30 years of use here).

Rebuild the tension rollers (they all need to be cleaned, lubed, and fresh damping fluid added)

– Replace the tape sensor micro-switches (they all are somewhat corroded at this age) DigiKey SW765-ND Omron Electronics Inc SS-3GL13P $2 (see last photo on this post)

Micro-switch Notes- In short order, I did verify 24VDC coming off the power supply board pin 43 (green wire) that goes to the left micro switch. The voltage looked good going to the right micro switch (white wire), but as soon as the right switch closes, it dropped the voltage to 2 volts, that goes back to the power supply board pin 29 (yellow wire).
Yes, the micro switches are bad. They couldn’t pass the voltage once any current was needed. I verified this by just jumping from pin 43 to 29 with a clip lead.

Completely disassemble, clean, lube and adjust the transport mechanism (a real contributing operation to sonic performance, like wow and flutter).

Adjust reel torques (braking, take-up, back, FF and REW).

Clean and deoxidize all user controls and internal switches/contacts (most units have dirty controls).

Relap the heads (an absolute necessity if you are going to change how the heads are aligned at all, since they normally have significant wear grooves in them).

Rotate all tape guides (necessary, since they also develop wear grooves from the tape passing over them)

Replace all electrolytic capacitors (they have only a 20-30 year lifespan)

Refresh all circuit board solder joints (flow-soldered joints also have only about a 30 year lifespan)

Verify the power supply voltages and filtering.

Perform a complete REC/PLAY alignment/calibration (head alignments, bias, equalization, levels, meter indications, etc.), optimizing performance for the owner/customer’s blank tape selection (necessary for best performance).

Extended functional testing (over several days), to determine the effects of the restoration, and to ensure that nothing was missed, or damaged.

Perform a complete cosmetic detailing (there are a couple of tricks and gotchas, even for this operation).
The Pioneer RT-909 has 8 circuit boards, with 121 caps, and the parts cost for the caps alone is approximately $65.00. The labor for the complete restoration, for a good tech, will likely be 30 to 40 hours.