Dear all,
a friend of mine had a very nice Becker Grand Prix (thin shaft) on his '63 W112 300SE Coupe. The sound was very nice, the radio had been gone through by Becker Autosound in NJ in 2008. The radio stopped working suddenly. so my friend sent the radio back to Becker Autosound NJ for repair, and unfortunately the news were not good, as the radio was assessed as being beyond reasonable repair. My friend got another same radio from Becker Autosound as a part exchange. Unfortunately the quality of the sound is far from being comparable to the one of the previous radio, and this replacement radio has a hard time staying tuned on a given station. So my friend contacted Becker Autosound NJ again to see if he could return the exchange radio and get his older one repaired instead, and what it would take. Here is the anwer he got from the Gentleman at Becker Autosound:
"What you may not know is your Grand Prix was a thin shaft GP. These were not made in great numbers and are very hard to find. (...) Beyond reasonable repair means that the amount of labor time and what part of the radio that is defective is either not available or is soo deep in the unit that I will never get it back together again. The tuning and volume shafts on yours were cut. I had a very difficult time getting the knobs off. You would have had an issue keeping the knobs on fully. The shafts can not be replaced due to the labor. Also the tuning shaft would require the entire side of the radio disassembled. I would never get it back together correctly. Remember this radio is from the early 60s. The more your do to it the more things will break.
The grand Prix has a very complex signal seek circuit that all the audio flows thru. It senses strength of signal for the seek to stop. There are several relay contacts that will fail over time causing low or no audio. Removal and either repair or replacement of the relay can cause more damage. Wires that go to the relay are brittle and can break or short. Replacing those wires requires the unit to be disassembled. Again good possibility that I could not get it back together again.
All this would have made your repair beyond what would be acceptable. That’s why we offered an exchange. Return the exchange and I will see what is up with the tuning and repair and return under warranty. I will send a shipping label for the return.
If you want your original returned [while keeping the other one]
I will need to treat it as an outright sale [and]
we would need to charge the difference. Or if this is not acceptable you can return the exchange and I will refund your money and send your original back".
The Gentleman also provided a link for the only one he could find on ebay, from ebay Germany:
https://www.ebay.de/itm/Becker-Grand-Prix-Rohrenradio-12V-Nadelstreifen-generaluberholt/122867565665?hash=item1c9b7a4461:g:3c0AAOSwB-1YqH3GWhile my friend is being offered a number of options, he regrets his former radio and is not sure on what to do at this point.
What I take from this experience, is that the components described above on any of these old radios will necessarily end up failing one day or the other due to age, use and driving vibrations, and that these radios won't be reparable. It also brings the question on what is meant by sellers when they claim the radios they are selling have been fully rebuilt, like the one on the link provided above. No matter the price, won't these radios end up failing without any possibility of repair?
I have tried the aftermarket old looking radio on My Pagoda. It works OK, but I was planning to have the original radio gone through and then reinstalled. But then, given the above, how long will it last?
I would be interested in the experience of board members with these older radios, and how they would proceed if they were in my friend's shoes.
Thanks, and merry christmas to all!