Congratulations! Good job! Now that I know you are a transistor device troubleshooting guru, I'll send you my SX-1050. I'm not sure I'm as brave as you are....
A good leader is someone who can tell you where to go, and make you look forward to the trip.
Never allow someone who has done nothing to advise you on anything.
Chris, your thread has been an inspiration for me to tackle resurrecting my Heathkit AR-15, my first system with Advent speakers and an AR-XA turntable. I switched to surround sound in the 80's, so the AR-15 was retired. It's loaded with electrolytics which I'll need to replace at a minimum, luckily there's several restoration projects documented out there. Too bad I got rid of my little Realistic equalizer, it would be handy to compensate for the garage acoustics, which is where it'll probably end up!
I built the AJ-15 tuner in a college dorm room in about 1968, when FM was coming alive. It was fed by a turnstile omni antenna hanging from a tree by a rope I tossed over a branch. It is in the very long queue of future projects. Keep us updated on your project and perhaps I will learn from it. But note that in my AA-14/AD-19 project, the bad actor was not an electrolytic, the usual suspect, but a resistor.
That said, I am inclined to replace the big filter cap and the two output caps just in general principles.
Another project is refoaming the Larger Advent speakers in the attic. I've got the kits and need to find time & ambition in the place where they are located.
I went out last night to see how frozen-up the changer was that came in this console. It's a BSR McDonald 500A, a low-mid range changer of the time. It has been sitting in my garage ca. 20 years. I set it on its place on the chassis and plugged it in. No action. I remembered all the comments I've read about petrified grease. So I spun the turntable with a finger and it started up. Mind you, it had been sitting in the unheated garage at maybe 25 deg. F. The change cycle stopped it.
So I pulled the turntable--a bit sticky-- and then pulled the changer cam wheel, also sticky. But the grease underneath in the track was still greasy. I replaced it anyway with some white grease, and cleaned and lubed the shafts for the turntable and cam wheel, and put it back together. I also cleaned the idler wheel and its turret with alcohol. It ran. Not bad.
The only problem is the stylus force adjustment--it's frozen. But I can accommodate that via the adjustable counterweight, if needed.
And then there's the cartridge, which appears to be integrated with the arm. No, not a P-mount. The stylus assembly looks like Shure (stylus broken off). I'll maybe try an old Shure assembly from my collection and see what happens.