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AppleCD 300e Plus CD-R performance

btb

Member
I've got an AppleCD 300e Plus, and it works pretty well. I know you aren't really supposed to expect them to read CD-Rs, but this one does, albeit not very well.
Interestingly, it often reads them only when "cold" - if I have a CD-R that won't read, I'll switch off the power to the drive, wait twenty minutes and try again, and it works. Is this a known failure mode of a specific component like a capacitor? I don't believe it's the power supply as I've run the drive outside the enclosure, using a different supply, and it behaved the same way.

Also, I've heard that older drives may be able to read CD-Rs (and CDs in general) better if you boost the laser's current slightly (possibly there's a trimmer on the head assembly) - does anyone have experience with that on this or similar drives?
 

NJRoadfan

Well-known member
These drives read CD-Rs just fine when new. It is likely capacitors if it is a temperature sensitive issue.
 

Phipli

Well-known member
They do usually read CDRs, although not all brands well. They will not read CDRWs.

Try cleaning the lens :

 

Byrd

Well-known member
The optical drive PCB has electrolytic caps, I'd have a look around and replace based on what you're saying. Adjusting the potentiometer on the laser lens is also a workaround, but increases the laser intensity which can lead to reducing the lifespan of the laser. I'd just clean the lens with a cotton tip dipped in IPA over adjusting the laser.

I also find "new" CD-R burnt discs work well in these older drives but the more they are used, with fine scratches as with normal use, they struggle over time.
 

3lectr1cPPC

Well-known member
I think the caps are only on the original 300 caddy load? Maybe? Go ahead and check, I’m unsure of this but google has no info on it.
 

btb

Member
It definitely has a handful of electrolytics. They're all tiny (though not surface-mount) so I don't think I have replacements handy. Any reason not to use tantalums if I have them around?

I need to figure out something I can use to test caps without spending an arm and a leg...
 

3lectr1cPPC

Well-known member
If they aren't SMD caps then they probably won't be leaking (definitely not a guarantee, but more unlikely), but they're still 30 year old electrolytic caps that could need to be replaced. Tantalum caps should be fine, just make sure you use a higher voltage replacement if for example, the cap is on the 12V rail, where you'd use a 25V tantalum cap instead of a 16V original. Tantalum caps are weird.
 
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