DVD player broke
I'm writing this as a post-mortem, but I secretely hope I'm wrong...
I spent thousands on computer crap, and now I'm broke. I had to promise I quit it, and then a $50 APEX DVD player stuck to me at Wal*Mart. I took it home, faced the music and after many moons I was forgiven. The DVD collection began growing. At some point it stopped working. It got progressively worse: gets stuck at a scene, then it would recover, then it didn't on some DVDs, then it didn't on most DVDs, then it ceased loading the root menu. I tried to clean the lens. It didn't work with the "lens cleaner" CD, but then I heard it rarely does. I opened the box and went at it. It still didn't work, but testing it with the lid off, I noticed a nasty "grinding" sound in the vicinity of the spindle. I put a drop of gun oil and it got better, but I'm afraid I got to it too late: it's plastic on plastic... I think the increased play suggested by noisy operation causes loss of positioning accurracy, which leads to loss of tracking, especially on used DVDs which are already scratched and dirty. Theoretically I should change the worn parts, but they seem to not be easily separated from the rest. Plus how long will it last again? Not to mention difficulty to find parts, cost and the chance it won't fix things after all. So it would make more sense to just get another one, with better quality parts - so more expensive. But that has to wait I'm afraid. |
DVD player broke
Apex is one of the worst . None of them are ment to last long under
steady use . Throw it away & get a new one . This time of year there will be low prices i just saw a Radio Shack commercial on tv advertising 29$ dvd players . buy 2 or 3 then just throw them away when they break :-) |
DVD player broke
The average consumer DVD players, unless it is a high end expensive model,
are not designed as serviceable. Your player is a very low cost unit, and there is no infostructure for spare parts and service. For most of these models, the dealers are instructed to directly give the customer a new machine during the warranty period. From your description, the laser assembly may to be replaced to make it work again. In many of the DVD player models, this comes as a complete assembly. Once changed, the tech has to have the necessary service information, and instrument set-ups to re-align the player. On a low cost machine this is out of the question. Considering a DVD player that is under $150 or so, there is no way after warranty to justify the cost of servicing it. An hour of labour plus the parts on a player that is a few years old, would be more than the value of the machine. During the warranty period, the manufactures send the user a new machine if it breaks down, unless it is a very expensive model that pays to service. This is with many of the appliances and home devices of today. I myself bought a new Panasonic 2.4 Gigarange phone. It stopped working on me about 2 months after I bought it. I brought it back. The dealer went to the back of the store and brought out another new one, and took mine. He told me that the old one is going back to be verified, and then to the crusher. -- Greetings, Jerry Greenberg GLG Technologies GLG ========================================= WebPage http://www.zoom-one.com Electronics http://www.zoom-one.com/electron.htm ========================================= "xepa001" wrote in message ... I'm writing this as a post-mortem, but I secretely hope I'm wrong... I spent thousands on computer crap, and now I'm broke. I had to promise I quit it, and then a $50 APEX DVD player stuck to me at Wal*Mart. I took it home, faced the music and after many moons I was forgiven. The DVD collection began growing. At some point it stopped working. It got progressively worse: gets stuck at a scene, then it would recover, then it didn't on some DVDs, then it didn't on most DVDs, then it ceased loading the root menu. I tried to clean the lens. It didn't work with the "lens cleaner" CD, but then I heard it rarely does. I opened the box and went at it. It still didn't work, but testing it with the lid off, I noticed a nasty "grinding" sound in the vicinity of the spindle. I put a drop of gun oil and it got better, but I'm afraid I got to it too late: it's plastic on plastic... I think the increased play suggested by noisy operation causes loss of positioning accurracy, which leads to loss of tracking, especially on used DVDs which are already scratched and dirty. Theoretically I should change the worn parts, but they seem to not be easily separated from the rest. Plus how long will it last again? Not to mention difficulty to find parts, cost and the chance it won't fix things after all. So it would make more sense to just get another one, with better quality parts - so more expensive. But that has to wait I'm afraid. |
DVD player broke
Considering an Apex DVD player is now $29.00 (!!), a repair is not even
sensible. It's wasteful to not repair it, but that's what you get these days with Korean/Chinese ultra-cheap electronics. You can either buy a $99-200.00 Sony/Panasonic/Etc and hope to expect years out of it, or just get another Apex and use it till it dies. It's pretty much a crapshoot... I've got an Apex AD-1500 that is now two years old and still going fine with moderate use. -Steve "xepa001" wrote in message ... I'm writing this as a post-mortem, but I secretely hope I'm wrong... I spent thousands on computer crap, and now I'm broke. I had to promise I quit it, and then a $50 APEX DVD player stuck to me at Wal*Mart. I took it home, faced the music and after many moons I was forgiven. The DVD collection began growing. At some point it stopped working. It got progressively worse: gets stuck at a scene, then it would recover, then it didn't on some DVDs, then it didn't on most DVDs, then it ceased loading the root menu. I tried to clean the lens. It didn't work with the "lens cleaner" CD, but then I heard it rarely does. I opened the box and went at it. It still didn't work, but testing it with the lid off, I noticed a nasty "grinding" sound in the vicinity of the spindle. I put a drop of gun oil and it got better, but I'm afraid I got to it too late: it's plastic on plastic... I think the increased play suggested by noisy operation causes loss of positioning accurracy, which leads to loss of tracking, especially on used DVDs which are already scratched and dirty. Theoretically I should change the worn parts, but they seem to not be easily separated from the rest. Plus how long will it last again? Not to mention difficulty to find parts, cost and the chance it won't fix things after all. So it would make more sense to just get another one, with better quality parts - so more expensive. But that has to wait I'm afraid. |
DVD player broke
Try taking it back to WalMart.
My wife bought a $50 Norcent DVD player there. We didn't use it much, maybe a dozen times, then turned it on one day and it was dead - no indicator lights, tray wouldn't open, nothing. Couldn't find the receipt, but as best we could remember it was just over 12 months old. We took it back - no receipt, but it was in the original packaging. Walmart gave us another $50 Norcent (updated model) and a receipt - no charge, no hassle. This time I kept the packaging and receipt. I expect I'll need it in about 12 months... xepa001 wrote: I'm writing this as a post-mortem, but I secretely hope I'm wrong... I spent thousands on computer crap, and now I'm broke. I had to promise I quit it, and then a $50 APEX DVD player stuck to me at Wal*Mart. I took it home, faced the music and after many moons I was forgiven. The DVD collection began growing. At some point it stopped working. It got progressively worse: gets stuck at a scene, then it would recover, then it didn't on some DVDs, then it didn't on most DVDs, then it ceased loading the root menu. I tried to clean the lens. It didn't work with the "lens cleaner" CD, but then I heard it rarely does. I opened the box and went at it. It still didn't work, but testing it with the lid off, I noticed a nasty "grinding" sound in the vicinity of the spindle. I put a drop of gun oil and it got better, but I'm afraid I got to it too late: it's plastic on plastic... I think the increased play suggested by noisy operation causes loss of positioning accurracy, which leads to loss of tracking, especially on used DVDs which are already scratched and dirty. Theoretically I should change the worn parts, but they seem to not be easily separated from the rest. Plus how long will it last again? Not to mention difficulty to find parts, cost and the chance it won't fix things after all. So it would make more sense to just get another one, with better quality parts - so more expensive. But that has to wait I'm afraid. |
DVD player broke
"Steve Reinis" ) writes:
Considering an Apex DVD player is now $29.00 (!!), a repair is not even sensible. It's wasteful to not repair it, but that's what you get these days with Korean/Chinese ultra-cheap electronics. You can either buy a $99-200.00 Sony/Panasonic/Etc and hope to expect years out of it, or just get another Apex and use it till it dies. It's pretty much a crapshoot... I've got an Apex AD-1500 that is now two years old and still going fine with moderate use. -Steve I haven't paid full attention, but I'm sure I read something somewhere about how some DVD players use IDE DVD-ROM drives, and if I did read that, it was in reference to some of the cheaper machines. If that's true, that might be a decent repair option, since in many cases it will be the mechanical drive. Not an outright cheap solution, but it's an idea. Of course, if the story is true, then surely the cheap DVD-ROM drives one can buy wouldn't be that different from what the cheap DVD players are using. Michael "xepa001" wrote in message ... I'm writing this as a post-mortem, but I secretely hope I'm wrong... I spent thousands on computer crap, and now I'm broke. I had to promise I quit it, and then a $50 APEX DVD player stuck to me at Wal*Mart. I took it home, faced the music and after many moons I was forgiven. The DVD collection began growing. At some point it stopped working. It got progressively worse: gets stuck at a scene, then it would recover, then it didn't on some DVDs, then it didn't on most DVDs, then it ceased loading the root menu. I tried to clean the lens. It didn't work with the "lens cleaner" CD, but then I heard it rarely does. I opened the box and went at it. It still didn't work, but testing it with the lid off, I noticed a nasty "grinding" sound in the vicinity of the spindle. I put a drop of gun oil and it got better, but I'm afraid I got to it too late: it's plastic on plastic... I think the increased play suggested by noisy operation causes loss of positioning accurracy, which leads to loss of tracking, especially on used DVDs which are already scratched and dirty. Theoretically I should change the worn parts, but they seem to not be easily separated from the rest. Plus how long will it last again? Not to mention difficulty to find parts, cost and the chance it won't fix things after all. So it would make more sense to just get another one, with better quality parts - so more expensive. But that has to wait I'm afraid. |
DVD player broke
Michael Black wrote: "Steve Reinis" ) writes: Considering an Apex DVD player is now $29.00 (!!), a repair is not even sensible. It's wasteful to not repair it, but that's what you get these days with Korean/Chinese ultra-cheap electronics. You can either buy a $99-200.00 Sony/Panasonic/Etc and hope to expect years out of it, or just get another Apex and use it till it dies. It's pretty much a crapshoot... I've got an Apex AD-1500 that is now two years old and still going fine with moderate use. -Steve I haven't paid full attention, but I'm sure I read something somewhere about how some DVD players use IDE DVD-ROM drives, and if I did read that, it was in reference to some of the cheaper machines. If that's true, that might be a decent repair option, since in many cases it will be the mechanical drive. Not an outright cheap solution, but it's an idea. Of course, if the story is true, then surely the cheap DVD-ROM drives one can buy wouldn't be that different from what the cheap DVD players are using. A friend recently put a Toshiba 16x DVD-ROM into his Apex 600A - not because the original drive was faulty, he just wanted a region-free player. Google can find the instructions. Michael "xepa001" wrote in message ... I'm writing this as a post-mortem, but I secretely hope I'm wrong... I spent thousands on computer crap, and now I'm broke. I had to promise I quit it, and then a $50 APEX DVD player stuck to me at Wal*Mart. I took it home, faced the music and after many moons I was forgiven. The DVD collection began growing. At some point it stopped working. It got progressively worse: gets stuck at a scene, then it would recover, then it didn't on some DVDs, then it didn't on most DVDs, then it ceased loading the root menu. I tried to clean the lens. It didn't work with the "lens cleaner" CD, but then I heard it rarely does. I opened the box and went at it. It still didn't work, but testing it with the lid off, I noticed a nasty "grinding" sound in the vicinity of the spindle. I put a drop of gun oil and it got better, but I'm afraid I got to it too late: it's plastic on plastic... I think the increased play suggested by noisy operation causes loss of positioning accurracy, which leads to loss of tracking, especially on used DVDs which are already scratched and dirty. Theoretically I should change the worn parts, but they seem to not be easily separated from the rest. Plus how long will it last again? Not to mention difficulty to find parts, cost and the chance it won't fix things after all. So it would make more sense to just get another one, with better quality parts - so more expensive. But that has to wait I'm afraid. |
DVD player broke
The same thing can (and usually, if Murphy has anything to do with it, will)
happen with an exensive unit. I have a $300 Sony unit that lasted about 18 months before it ceased being able to read DVDs of any variety. "NO DISC". Out of warranty, out of luck. The damn thing couldn't play most CD and DVDR/RW media anyway. So I bought a cheap $80 APEX which plays just about EVERY media and format I can throw at it: DVD-R/RW DVD+R/RW VCD SVCD JPG MP3, and even XVCD. Yes, it does not "feel" like it is built for lots of use and abuse but I've taken care of it and 2 years later, so far so good. Also make sure whatever you buy can be upgraded with a new firmware. Since the APEX worked out for me I bought another cheap DVD, this time an AKAI unit (actually a Daewoo). It would not play my DVD-R / RW or DVD+R / RW and SVCDs authored with Ulead. I contacted the company and they emailed me a new firmware revision to burn on CD and boot the DVD player with to update it. Now my AKAI plays just about every media and format I can cram into it. Worst DVD player I've ever seen: My aunt's expen$ive Toshiba SD-2300 which will ONLY play commercial DVDs and will not play any DVDR/RW or CD media, period. And -- guess what? No firmware upgrades! Why not just flush your money down the toilet? Toshiba normally makes good stuff, but they should be ashamed of that one. Summary: Cheap but sturdy DVD players that can be flashed: GOOD Expensive name-brand dead-end DVD players: BAD Douglas "Steve Reinis" wrote in message ... Considering an Apex DVD player is now $29.00 (!!), a repair is not even sensible. It's wasteful to not repair it, but that's what you get these days with Korean/Chinese ultra-cheap electronics. You can either buy a $99-200.00 Sony/Panasonic/Etc and hope to expect years out of it, or just get another Apex and use it till it dies. It's pretty much a crapshoot... I've got an Apex AD-1500 that is now two years old and still going fine with moderate use. -Steve |
DVD player broke
"xepa001" wrote in message ... I'm writing this as a post-mortem, but I secretely hope I'm wrong... I spent thousands on computer crap, and now I'm broke. I had to promise I quit it, and then a $50 APEX DVD player stuck to me at Wal*Mart. I took it home, faced the music and after many moons I was forgiven. The DVD collection began growing. At some point it stopped working. It got progressively worse: gets stuck at a scene, then it would recover, then it didn't on some DVDs, then it didn't on most DVDs, then it ceased loading the root menu. I tried to clean the lens. It didn't work with the "lens cleaner" CD, but then I heard it rarely does. I opened the box and went at it. It still didn't work, but testing it with the lid off, I noticed a nasty "grinding" sound in the vicinity of the spindle. I put a drop of gun oil and it got better, but I'm afraid I got to it too late: it's plastic on plastic... I think the increased play suggested by noisy operation causes loss of positioning accurracy, which leads to loss of tracking, especially on used DVDs which are already scratched and dirty. Theoretically I should change the worn parts, but they seem to not be easily separated from the rest. Plus how long will it last again? Not to mention difficulty to find parts, cost and the chance it won't fix things after all. So it would make more sense to just get another one, with better quality parts - so more expensive. But that has to wait I'm afraid. Those lense cleaners are garbage, don't bother. Check the power supply, I fixed one that had a 1000uF 16v capacitor that failed and caused it to wig out occasionally, it was bulging. If you have a mechanical failure you may as well scrap it though. |
DVD player broke
"Ken G." wrote in message ... Apex is one of the worst . None of them are ment to last long under steady use . Throw it away & get a new one . This time of year there will be low prices i just saw a Radio Shack commercial on tv advertising 29$ dvd players . buy 2 or 3 then just throw them away when they break :-) I've actually been very happy with my Apex, after replacing the capacitor it's been reliable, it was also very easy to hack the firmware to make it region free and turn off macrovision, it plays everything I've thrown at it so far. |
DVD player broke
I've actually been very happy with my Apex, after replacing the capacitor it's been reliable, it was also very easy to hack the firmware to make it region free and turn off macrovision, it plays everything I've thrown at it so far. I have heard of that and the fact a few of the early Apex had a generic drive in them with a common plug strip so a computer drive could fit right in . I think i have a couple early Apex players new in box in my bone yard . |
DVD player broke
I've actually been very happy with my Apex, after replacing the capacitor it's been reliable, it was also very easy to hack the firmware to make it region free and turn off macrovision, it plays everything I've thrown at it so far. I have heard of that and the fact a few of the early Apex had a generic drive in them with a common plug strip so a computer drive could fit right in . I think i have a couple early Apex players new in box in my bone yard . |
DVD player broke
Cheap but sturdy DVD players that can be flashed: GOOD
Expensive name-brand dead-end DVD players: BAD Sturdy appears to be rather relative. Most Apex DVD players I've seen are poorly built. The mainboards are okay and internal construction is simplistic, but the power supply sections are cheaply designed and built. The disc drives aren't any better. Many Apex players have used IDE DVD-ROM drives, but the drives that are used are usually pitiful. They can be swapped with better drives, but that's more effort than it might normally be worth unless you are intentionally going after a player than can truly read just about anything. Furthermore, if you bench test these cheap players to judge their playback quality, they can turn out some of the worst ratings you will ever see. The only advantage I can see for Apex is that some of their players can be modified easily for region-free and Macrovision-free playback. But not all Apex players are fortunate. While some models only require a few keystrokes on the remote or a firmware flash from a CD-R, others require a hard swap of the BIOS chip. Some don't even have mods available, particularly some of the newer mini-players. Foruntaely, ANY DVD player will outclass VHS. But a Panasonic will outclass an Apex in terms of the two most important aspects in a DVD player: Picture and sound quality. - Reinhart |
DVD player broke
Cheap but sturdy DVD players that can be flashed: GOOD
Expensive name-brand dead-end DVD players: BAD Sturdy appears to be rather relative. Most Apex DVD players I've seen are poorly built. The mainboards are okay and internal construction is simplistic, but the power supply sections are cheaply designed and built. The disc drives aren't any better. Many Apex players have used IDE DVD-ROM drives, but the drives that are used are usually pitiful. They can be swapped with better drives, but that's more effort than it might normally be worth unless you are intentionally going after a player than can truly read just about anything. Furthermore, if you bench test these cheap players to judge their playback quality, they can turn out some of the worst ratings you will ever see. The only advantage I can see for Apex is that some of their players can be modified easily for region-free and Macrovision-free playback. But not all Apex players are fortunate. While some models only require a few keystrokes on the remote or a firmware flash from a CD-R, others require a hard swap of the BIOS chip. Some don't even have mods available, particularly some of the newer mini-players. Foruntaely, ANY DVD player will outclass VHS. But a Panasonic will outclass an Apex in terms of the two most important aspects in a DVD player: Picture and sound quality. - Reinhart |
DVD player broke
"LASERandDVDfan" wrote in message ... Most Apex DVD players I've seen are poorly built. True. My strategy is to use it in the bedroom where DVDs rarely get watched. The only advantage I can see for Apex is that some of their players can be modified easily for region-free and Macrovision-free playback. But not all That and the ability to flash (not to mention the support from the mrf to provide firmware updates) unless the thing reads all advertised media and formats correctly out of the box. My AKAI did not, but after a firmware update it does now. Foruntaely, ANY DVD player will outclass VHS. But a Panasonic will outclass an Apex in terms of the two most important aspects in a DVD player: Picture and sound quality. I'm would be all for that provided I can depend on the DVD player to last more than a couple years. But dropping upwards of $300 on a premium Sony model only to have it die after 18 months changed my thinking. But then again that's probably just a Sony thing as I've had untimely deaths of a Sony VCR, DVD, and 17-inch monitor. OTOH my Sony TV continues to work 7 years later. |
DVD player broke
"LASERandDVDfan" wrote in message ... Most Apex DVD players I've seen are poorly built. True. My strategy is to use it in the bedroom where DVDs rarely get watched. The only advantage I can see for Apex is that some of their players can be modified easily for region-free and Macrovision-free playback. But not all That and the ability to flash (not to mention the support from the mrf to provide firmware updates) unless the thing reads all advertised media and formats correctly out of the box. My AKAI did not, but after a firmware update it does now. Foruntaely, ANY DVD player will outclass VHS. But a Panasonic will outclass an Apex in terms of the two most important aspects in a DVD player: Picture and sound quality. I'm would be all for that provided I can depend on the DVD player to last more than a couple years. But dropping upwards of $300 on a premium Sony model only to have it die after 18 months changed my thinking. But then again that's probably just a Sony thing as I've had untimely deaths of a Sony VCR, DVD, and 17-inch monitor. OTOH my Sony TV continues to work 7 years later. |
DVD player broke
I recently fixed a Sanyo DVD player that wouldn't read DVDs and would
bearly read CDs. It was owned by a smoker and all the pickups internal optics were coated with tar. I immersed the pickup in a glass of alcohol which I put in my ultrasonic cleaner to try to clean it. So far it seems to have worked although I wouldn't want to sell it to someone. -- Andy Cuffe |
DVD player broke
Andy Cuffe wrote in message ...
I recently fixed a Sanyo DVD player that wouldn't read DVDs and would bearly read CDs. It was owned by a smoker and all the pickups internal optics were coated with tar. I immersed the pickup in a glass of alcohol which I put in my ultrasonic cleaner to try to clean it. So far it seems to have worked although I wouldn't want to sell it to someone. Interesting. Did you have to realign anything when you put the pickup back in? -A |
DVD player broke
Andy Cuffe wrote in message ...
I recently fixed a Sanyo DVD player that wouldn't read DVDs and would bearly read CDs. It was owned by a smoker and all the pickups internal optics were coated with tar. I immersed the pickup in a glass of alcohol which I put in my ultrasonic cleaner to try to clean it. So far it seems to have worked although I wouldn't want to sell it to someone. Interesting. Did you have to realign anything when you put the pickup back in? -A |
DVD player broke
Andre wrote:
Interesting. Did you have to realign anything when you put the pickup back in? -A I just let it dry for a few hours and reinstalled it. It worked fine with no alignment. It even plays DVD+R's. I have a couple of Sony players I might try it with next. With the low cost of DVD players, there's nothing to lose by trying. -- Andy Cuffe |
DVD player broke
Andre wrote:
Interesting. Did you have to realign anything when you put the pickup back in? -A I just let it dry for a few hours and reinstalled it. It worked fine with no alignment. It even plays DVD+R's. I have a couple of Sony players I might try it with next. With the low cost of DVD players, there's nothing to lose by trying. -- Andy Cuffe |
DVD player broke
But dropping upwards of $300 on a premium Sony
model only to have it die after 18 months changed my thinking. But then again that's probably just a Sony thing as I've had untimely deaths of a Sony VCR, DVD, and 17-inch monitor. OTOH my Sony TV continues to work 7 years later. And almost all of my Sony items still work perfectly, including my DVP-S360, which I bought brand new in December of 2000. I'm a Sony fan because almost all of the Sony products I've owned have not failed on me. Some have, like my SVO-160 VCR, but doing the capacitor fix in the power supply module brought it back to life, and it has the best VHS picture and VHS Hi-Fi sound out of any VHS VCR I've ever seen. - Reinhart |
DVD player broke
But dropping upwards of $300 on a premium Sony
model only to have it die after 18 months changed my thinking. But then again that's probably just a Sony thing as I've had untimely deaths of a Sony VCR, DVD, and 17-inch monitor. OTOH my Sony TV continues to work 7 years later. And almost all of my Sony items still work perfectly, including my DVP-S360, which I bought brand new in December of 2000. I'm a Sony fan because almost all of the Sony products I've owned have not failed on me. Some have, like my SVO-160 VCR, but doing the capacitor fix in the power supply module brought it back to life, and it has the best VHS picture and VHS Hi-Fi sound out of any VHS VCR I've ever seen. - Reinhart |
DVD player broke
And almost all of my Sony items still work perfectly, including my
DVP-S360, Knock on wood. Mark Z. -- Please reply only to Group. I regret this is necessary. Viruses and spam have rendered my regular e-mail address useless. "LASERandDVDfan" wrote in message ... But dropping upwards of $300 on a premium Sony model only to have it die after 18 months changed my thinking. But then again that's probably just a Sony thing as I've had untimely deaths of a Sony VCR, DVD, and 17-inch monitor. OTOH my Sony TV continues to work 7 years later. And almost all of my Sony items still work perfectly, including my DVP-S360, which I bought brand new in December of 2000. I'm a Sony fan because almost all of the Sony products I've owned have not failed on me. Some have, like my SVO-160 VCR, but doing the capacitor fix in the power supply module brought it back to life, and it has the best VHS picture and VHS Hi-Fi sound out of any VHS VCR I've ever seen. - Reinhart |
DVD player broke
And almost all of my Sony items still work perfectly, including my
DVP-S360, Knock on wood. Mark Z. -- Please reply only to Group. I regret this is necessary. Viruses and spam have rendered my regular e-mail address useless. "LASERandDVDfan" wrote in message ... But dropping upwards of $300 on a premium Sony model only to have it die after 18 months changed my thinking. But then again that's probably just a Sony thing as I've had untimely deaths of a Sony VCR, DVD, and 17-inch monitor. OTOH my Sony TV continues to work 7 years later. And almost all of my Sony items still work perfectly, including my DVP-S360, which I bought brand new in December of 2000. I'm a Sony fan because almost all of the Sony products I've owned have not failed on me. Some have, like my SVO-160 VCR, but doing the capacitor fix in the power supply module brought it back to life, and it has the best VHS picture and VHS Hi-Fi sound out of any VHS VCR I've ever seen. - Reinhart |
DVD player broke
Andy Cuffe wrote in message ...
Andre wrote: Interesting. Did you have to realign anything when you put the pickup back in? -A I just let it dry for a few hours and reinstalled it. It worked fine with no alignment. It even plays DVD+R's. I have a couple of Sony players I might try it with next. With the low cost of DVD players, there's nothing to lose by trying. I'll have to buy or build myself an ultrasonic cleaner and try that one :) -A |
DVD player broke
Andy Cuffe wrote in message ...
Andre wrote: Interesting. Did you have to realign anything when you put the pickup back in? -A I just let it dry for a few hours and reinstalled it. It worked fine with no alignment. It even plays DVD+R's. I have a couple of Sony players I might try it with next. With the low cost of DVD players, there's nothing to lose by trying. I'll have to buy or build myself an ultrasonic cleaner and try that one :) -A |
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