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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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With some of my damaged tapes I get horizontal lines, anywhere from
1/4" to 2" thick, that slowly move down the screen. With some VCRs, like a Panasonic PV-V4521, those lines look like white static, but with others, like the last standalone Sanyo I could find, the lines are merely distortions in the picture. How did Sanyo do that? Both of these VCRs are hi-fi stereo and have 4- video heads. |
#2
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![]() "larry moe 'n curly" wrote in message oups.com... With some of my damaged tapes I get horizontal lines, anywhere from 1/4" to 2" thick, that slowly move down the screen. With some VCRs, like a Panasonic PV-V4521, those lines look like white static, but with others, like the last standalone Sanyo I could find, the lines are merely distortions in the picture. How did Sanyo do that? Both of these VCRs are hi-fi stereo and have 4- video heads. Possibly because the dropout compensator is a more sophisticated design using memory rather than a delay line ?? Arfa |
#3
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On Oct 12, 7:29 pm, "Arfa Daily" wrote:
"larry moe 'n curly" wrote in ooglegroups.com... With some of my damaged tapes I get horizontal lines, anywhere from 1/4" to 2" thick, that slowly move down the screen. With some VCRs, like a Panasonic PV-V4521, those lines look like white static, but with others, like the last standalone Sanyo I could find, the lines are merely distortions in the picture. How did Sanyo do that? Both of these VCRs are hi-fi stereo and have 4- video heads. Possibly because the dropout compensator is a more sophisticated design using memory rather than a delay line ?? Arfa I agree. H. R.(Bob) Hofmann |
#4
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On 13 oct, 01:35, larry moe 'n curly
wrote: With some of my damaged tapes I get horizontal lines, anywhere from 1/4" to 2" thick, that slowly move down the screen. With some VCRs, like a Panasonic PV-V4521, those lines look like white static, but with others, like the last standalone Sanyo I could find, the lines are merely distortions in the picture. How did Sanyo do that? Both of these VCRs are hi-fi stereo and have 4- video heads. I remember when VCRs appeared with the 'HQ' tag and being amazed at how few comet tails and dropouts there were compared to machines from only a couple of years earlier... presumably those had much better dropout compensators. -B |
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