One of my Technics 5 disc CD changers died from a bad laser I think (just quit working one day). I purchased it new in the 90's and used it daily since then till a couple years ago. Luckily you can find replacement units cheap, and I lucked into a Technics SL-MC400 100+ disc unit cheap (just needed a new 0-ring to replace a worn out belt).No, usually the optical pickup units are proprietary to the drives.
We are having that problem in the collectible CD player world. No optical pickup units to be had.
A couple cases I had to physically change the laser diode, got lucky because the diode is separate from the detector IC, and since the diode itself isnt collimated, and the collimator is internal to the assembly, you dont lose optical alignment.
Some of the oldest high-end CD players, like the CDP-701ES units from Sony, the glue holding the prisms together is beginning to deteriorate and fog up, blocking the laser beam itself. I have not found a solution for that.
But they are NOT the same as far as the pickup is concerned. I already know this because I tried to swap one out from 2 very similar drives but the pickup unit was different. I have an 8X drive that wont obtain focus lock, and thats how I discovered this. Turned out it was actually the RF Amp IC. Once I changed that out from a similar drive, it fired over.I think he was talking about Panasonic SCSI and IDE drives that were used by Apple for many years. The drives seem very similar, main difference being the (obvious), different controller board, even then that has some similarities too.
Might have been built on the same 'platform' so to speak, differed only by the connector on the end of the drive?
Had to replace the laser in my PS3 last year...fun times.And the PS3, and the xbox, and probably the PS4 by now.
