Message-ID: | <4092A0AB.40507@aueb.gr> |
Date: | Fri, 30 Apr 2004 21:53:31 +0300 |
From: | Diomidis Spinellis <dds@aueb.gr> |
Organization: | Athens University of Economics and Business |
User-Agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.6) Gecko/20040113 |
MIME-Version: | 1.0 |
Newsgroups: | sci.electronics.repair |
To: | "Jerry G." <jerryg50@hotmail.com> |
Subject: | Re: Sony VCR enters weird state after rewind or fast forward |
References: | <c6tjga$87b$1@nic.grnet.gr> <c6tuio$2pe$2@news.eusc.inter.net> |
In-Reply-To: | <c6tuio$2pe$2@news.eusc.inter.net> |
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Jerry, many thanks for taking the trouble to reply. You are the
newsgroup's wise man!
You are right, the machine is difficult to service. I placed a gear
assembly at the wrong tooth position, and it took me four hours to
understand how to assemble it in the right position (there was no
apparent timing mark, and it fell off by mistake). The gear in question
had teeth around 3/4 of its periphery. Apparently the trick is to
engage the gear in a "toothless" position and then rotate the gear that
drives it. At some point the driving gear "catches" the partially
toothless gear and engages it at exactly the correct position.
Back to the original subject. I may be getting closer to the problem's
cause: I decoded the error message on the display as: "05 Abnormal
reverse cam motor rotation", and I noticed that a large gear-driven
plastic plate is in a different position (by one tooth) when the problem
manifests itsself, than when the tape is originally put into the VCR. I
assume that the plate should be in the same position when the tape is
first inserted, and after stop is pressed. I will experiment engaging
this plate at different gear teeth, assuming it was somehow missaligned
(e.g. by someone forcing the tape into the VCR).
Cheers,
Diomidis
Jerry G. wrote:
> A warn idler assembly and or a bearing or bushing that is failing or jamming
> can cause this type of effect. This is the only thing I can think of from
> guessing at a probably cause. The best thing would be to have someone who
> has a lot of VCR service experience to look at it for you. There machines
> can be a challenge to service.
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