F
Fabian La Maestra
Guest
I recently bought a Mint Sony SLV-595HF VCR, which was working
perfectly for about three months, and then I decided to start using
T-160 tapes 9-hour tapes.
Then it happened: The tape in the winding spool in the cassette
somehow got warped in the tape spool causing it to not hold the entire
tape length.
While attempting to play this tape, the VCR appeared to have had to
"pull" very hard to get the tape to continue to flow and then ejected
the tape, due to the tape flow stopping altogether.
When the tape ejected, there was tape all over the place after the
cassette was removed. I managed to GENTLY pull the tape out and then
pull upwards to disengage the tape form the pulleys and tape-guides in
the VCR.
So now I have my tape back, still surprisingly in good condition and a
VCR that seems to now have a problem playing just about anything.
Problem: Any played video seems to have a problem locking on the video
unless I start using the manual-tracking to "stabilize" the video
image, also introducing other tracking video fragments. This problem
kind of resembles film being played at the wrong speed, showing the
frames passing instead of a stable image.
I was recently looking at the innards of the VCR, and everything seems
to be tight and unbroken. I also tried cleaning the heads, pulleys,
and checking the moving parts.
Question: Is there a certain number of things I should try before
deciding to turn this unit into a glorified REWINDER?
HELP?
Fabian.
perfectly for about three months, and then I decided to start using
T-160 tapes 9-hour tapes.
Then it happened: The tape in the winding spool in the cassette
somehow got warped in the tape spool causing it to not hold the entire
tape length.
While attempting to play this tape, the VCR appeared to have had to
"pull" very hard to get the tape to continue to flow and then ejected
the tape, due to the tape flow stopping altogether.
When the tape ejected, there was tape all over the place after the
cassette was removed. I managed to GENTLY pull the tape out and then
pull upwards to disengage the tape form the pulleys and tape-guides in
the VCR.
So now I have my tape back, still surprisingly in good condition and a
VCR that seems to now have a problem playing just about anything.
Problem: Any played video seems to have a problem locking on the video
unless I start using the manual-tracking to "stabilize" the video
image, also introducing other tracking video fragments. This problem
kind of resembles film being played at the wrong speed, showing the
frames passing instead of a stable image.
I was recently looking at the innards of the VCR, and everything seems
to be tight and unbroken. I also tried cleaning the heads, pulleys,
and checking the moving parts.
Question: Is there a certain number of things I should try before
deciding to turn this unit into a glorified REWINDER?
HELP?
Fabian.