How to hook a specific audio cord, attached to a phonograph arm, into an independent amp?
I have a vintage 1960's record player that spins properly but has no sound. The arm of the mechanism has a, black and red, audio wire coming out if it. I want to know how to hook this specific audio cord into an independent amp? I don't want to use the phonographs built in speakers or amp. I do however want to use its arm and needle. I also should note that the phonograph has no output plugs. Please help me if you can. It would mean allot to me.
Run the red wire to the center pin of an RCA cable and the black to the outer shield. Then plug this into the white Phono audio input in your stereo (this may allow monophonic audio into both sides of the amp, or it will just show up on the left side). If you don’t have a Phono input (which has a built-in preamplifier for the extremely low Phonograph audio signals) and it’s not loud enough to hear, you’ll have to run it into an outboard Phono preamp first.
If you get an audible 60-cycle hum with the phonograph hooked to your amplifier, youhave to run a grounding wire (just a bare or insulated copper wire) to connect the chassis of both pieces of equipment.
The two wires can can probably be wired to a phono preamp (See link for one source) and that connected to a "regular" amp or receiver. A simple RCA phono plug on a short wire spliced to the wires from the phono arm would probably work. Assume the red is positive and the black is negative. The fact there are only two wires suggest the cartridge is mono only (although you could substitute a stereo cartridge in the arm (you would need to be sure the weight rating of the cartridge is compatible with the arm).
Note that the output from the cartridge in the phono arm is VERY low, so you MUST use a preamp equalized for phono (RIAA curve equalization) between the cartridge and the normal audio amplifier..