Question for technicians


Recently I noticed my system was sounding dull and flat. Then I discovered there was little to no sound out of the right speaker, just an intermittent weak signal accompanied by static. Later, I noticed that I could make the signal come and go by merely touching the preamp's input selector switch, or applying a slight push-or-pull pressure to the control knob. I don't have any audio shops around here that I trust and I can do simple things like solder touch-up, continuity checks with a vom etc... Any ideas of how to go about checking this out? (greatly appreciate any and all advice)
rawinsonde
Give it a shot with the preamp in a verticle position, working the input back and forth,
let sit over night.
If you can't get to the switch itself then the cleaner is likely not going to do the job by trying to get it to go through the shaft bushing for the switch!

Your best option at this point is actually pretty simple- operate the switch vigorously to both limits about 50 times and see if it gives you any trouble after that. The only reason its a problem is corrosion from lack of operations.
Just for the record, I believe I said "selector" switch in an earlier post, but the faulty switch is actually the balance control (L to R) ... I'll try Atmasphere's vigorous attack method as that stuff seems to dry instantly and I doubt that it has any penetrating ability.
I work on vintage electronics a lot. The better stuff frequently have 'J pots' in them- Allen Bradley J-Style potentiometers. They are really well sealed. If they get noisy, the technique above actually works fairly well on them unless they are really far gone. In that case you have to drill a small hole in them which is really dicy, but at least then you can clean them.
this is an arc sp9-ii if you happen to know what style pots it has... I worked the switch many times as you suggested and it appears fine. hope it holds up. thanks