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Wednesday
Oct102012

Rebuilding a NuTone 2500 Stereo Music Intercom Master Station

This is Musicom. . . World's First Built-In Stereo System with Separate Intercom Option. . NuTone's Deluxe Solid State Stereo Entertainment Center 2500 Series.

In a modular group of truly magnificent built-in units you can enjoy high-fidelity stereo throughout your home. . .

The Model 2500 Stereo Music Intercom System was the panicle of design in the early 1970's.  With it's optional choices of cassette or 8-track tape player and fold-down record changer it was something to behold.

When the master station was mounted along with the matching center cabinet and the 2- Deluxe Stereo 3-way speakers you would have a entire wall of Stereo NuTone goodness.

The Model 2500 has a maximum capacity of 20 pairs of stereo speakers along with the model 2510 Intercom Control Master.  There was a selection of several different wall and ceiling mounted stereo speakers along with 3 choices of patio stations and even wall mounted alarm-clock station with intercom controls built-in.

The Model 2500 also included radio station "Pushbutton Tuning" which worked from any remote speaker station.  This feature allowed the user to select from 6 FM preset stations and a single AM preset station.

The Modle 2500 is a very rare system, I have only seen six installations in the past 30 years. 

 

Repairing a 40 year old Classic:

Working a 40 year old classic 2500 Master Station can be intimidating.

First off it requires a special bench power supply kit that used to be available from NuTone.  The kit included a genuine 2500 power transformer (it weights 20 pounds) along with the correct plug connectors and a stripped down power supply board.  Without this kit you would have to remove the power transformer from the customers wall housing, no small task.

Once you get the 2500 on the bench, you can see quality everywhere you look.  A steel chassis made up from 8 different plates that bolt together. An aluminum heat sink with 4 output transistors mounted to it.

 

Buried down inside the steel chassis are 7 circuit boards and a lot of interconnecting wires.  To work on a 2500, you have to bolt the chassis and open the unit up to gain access to the component side of the boards.  Care must be taken to not break off any of the interconnecting wires.

This 2500 came in with a loud and pronounced hum that could be heard throughout the system.  It would need a complete power supply board rebuild and the rest of the boards should be gone through as well.

Since the 2500 is a stereo system, there are almost 2 of everything inside the master.

The power supply board has 4 single capacitors and 1 multi-section can capacitor along with 16 diodes.

Replacing the 4 single capacitors is easy, the multi-section can capacitor is a challenge because this is a obsolete type of part and nothing that is available will fit correctly.

The only choice is to "restuff" the original can.  This done by opening up the original can capacitor, removing the contents and then affixing new capacitors inside the can.  Once the can is sealed up it is refitted to its place on the board.

The diodes should be replaced as a matter of course since the 2500 is already apart on the bench.

Upon inspection I found that this 2500 has been worked on before and some of the workmanship left a lot to be desired.  

Some of the original capacitors had been replaced (the ones that were easy to get to) and they were replaced with Radial Capacitors instead of the correct Axial Capacitors.

Using radial capacitors on boards that were designed for axial parts makes for a messy board and the actual capacitor is not held in place properly.  

 

You can see the how the capacitors (red arrows) sit up on the board and its leads run off to each side (green arrows), with much of the bare lead exposed.  In some cases, in some circuits, having the bare lead exposed on top of the board will act like an antenna and it will pickup stray electrical noise from the surrounding circuits.  This is not something you want to have inside an amplifier.

While the correct axial parts (red arrows) cost a little more, it's a small increase in cost compared to the effort to rebuild the 2500. 

After all of the boards were inspected and refurbished, the controls were cleaned and the 2500 was reassembled.  

Here are all of the parts that were replaced to bring this 2500 back to good working order. New dial lamps finished off the rebuild and a days worth of testing showed that this 2500 was ready for another decade of enjoyment.

See all of the Model 2500 picures here

Ask a Questions about your NuTone 2500 System

Send a Intercom Repair Request Form 

 

Reader Comments (2)

Dear Chris:

The Nutone 2520 Deluxe Speaker was the best high quality speaker that Nutone ever made. It has a 12 inch woofer, a 4 inch mid-range speaker and a 3 1/2 inch tweeter. Schematics also show that it has a choke, a resistor and two capacitors (4UF-20V, 8UF-20V). This extraordinary speaker belongs to the Nutone's Deluxe 2500 series. As far as I know, the 2500 system is a 45 Ohm system, all their speakers are 45 ohm except this 2520 which is 8 ohms.

Question: Can I use this 2520 Deluxe Speaker with my N2561 system (which is a 45 ohm system as well) using a 2573-B as a remote control ? If the answer is positive: Would it count as one, two or three speakers ?

Thanks a lot !

July 14, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterLuis DC

Hi Luis,

There is no simple answer to your question. Since the Model 2520 was not part of the N2561 Intercom line there is no real world experience to base an answer on. There is much more to consider than just the speaker impedance when trying to decide if the 2520 could work.

The real question is - is the N2561 up to the task of driving all of the remote station connected to it, plus the 2520?

Chris

July 18, 2016 | Registered CommenterCindy & Christopher

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