I started a thread on this blender a few years ago when I first acquired it and it attracted a decent amount of activity, but I have a new question so figured some fresh eyes and a focus on a single issue might help me find an answer.
The mechanical timer that controls the pulsing action didn't stay working for long after I had it apart and fiddled with it. For the life of me, I can't remember how I removed the timer from the machine, as there's a retaining screw that's virtually inaccessible behind the control panel. I can't find any way to remove that screw without perhaps cracking the plastic housing for the control panel, as there doesn't seem to be any obvious way to remove the control panel assembly in order to access that screw.
Has anyone had a Cyclomatic apart far enough to access this screw, and if so, can you share how you did it?
I've loaned out my black & blue Lady Kenmore (Osterizer clone) to a friend and the Cyclomatic is on my kitchen counter, where I'd like to keep it and use the Cyclomatic feature, since the blender offers 825 watts of power compared to 600 or 650 on the LK.
Thanks for any help,
Ralph

The mechanical timer that controls the pulsing action didn't stay working for long after I had it apart and fiddled with it. For the life of me, I can't remember how I removed the timer from the machine, as there's a retaining screw that's virtually inaccessible behind the control panel. I can't find any way to remove that screw without perhaps cracking the plastic housing for the control panel, as there doesn't seem to be any obvious way to remove the control panel assembly in order to access that screw.
Has anyone had a Cyclomatic apart far enough to access this screw, and if so, can you share how you did it?
I've loaned out my black & blue Lady Kenmore (Osterizer clone) to a friend and the Cyclomatic is on my kitchen counter, where I'd like to keep it and use the Cyclomatic feature, since the blender offers 825 watts of power compared to 600 or 650 on the LK.
Thanks for any help,
Ralph
