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Sony Handycam Video 8mm - Tape Alignment/Tracking Issue

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Bob Shuman

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Apr 22, 2005, 8:18:57 AM4/22/05
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I have a 10 year old Sony Handycam Video 8mm - Model #CCD-TR91 that has
served us well. The unit is on it's 4th battery, but still works, kind
of... I suspect the trouble is with tape alignment/tracking since some
previously recorded events and sometimes new events as well do not display
properly. Usually I lose half the picture with tracking lines and at times
it also is in Black and White only.

I do not see any electronic tracking adjustments similar to similar vintage
VHS VCRs. Can anyone provide a reference to a service manual or a tracking
adjustment procedure? At this point I am inclined to replace the unit with
another since price has come down so much over the years, but before I did,
I wanted to take a shot at aligning it myself.

Thanks in advance for your help.

Bob

Ken Weitzel

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Apr 22, 2005, 11:11:45 AM4/22/05
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Hi Bob...

I'd urge you to forget all about electronic adjustment and
instead focus on mechanical problems...

Start with a good thorough cleaning... the tracking head,
the pressure idler, the video heads, the capstan and idler,
and the audio head. A little isopropyl alcohol and a bunch
of q-tips. A little - moist q-tips, *not* wet.

Pay particular attention to the capstan idler. No flat spots,
indents from the idler? Does it line up perfectly with the
idler?

Look at the audio head - it's spring loaded for azimuth
adjustment. Still sitting normally?

Check the supply hub, clean it well.

Then, after completely absolutely dry, I'd watch it play
a tape. Supply side feeding tape smoothly, not jerking.
Nothing skewing the tape.

If still no luck, look at one of the failing tapes. Edges
not "rippled"? If so, invest in one brand new one to try.

Hope this helps... take care.

Ken

Jumpster Jiver

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Apr 22, 2005, 11:27:01 AM4/22/05
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These cameras had a common problem with the tape guides. The guides
immediately before and after the video head have a tiny allen key set
screw near the bottom which loosens, then the guide moves out of
alignment one way when the tape is moving forward, and the other way
when it's moving in reverse.
Aligning the guides is a complex process. It involves playing back an
alignment tape while connecting an oscilloscope to a test point on the
circuit board. The point is in a different place on each camera.
The problem is that if any tapes were recorded while the machine was OUT
of alignment, they will no longer play when the machine IS properly aligned.
When the guides are aligned, the set-screws are tightened and it usually
never goes out of alignment again.
Now here's the bigger problem - Sony camcorders of this age have a
serious problem with capacitors going bad, leaking, burning traces off
the circuit board with their acid, etc.
Not two or three caps, more like 100 of them. The amount of labor
involved with replacing all of these capacitors makes the camera not
economical to repair.

Bob Shuman

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Apr 22, 2005, 12:19:16 PM4/22/05
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Ken & JJ,

Thanks for the feedback and advice. I will take a closer look to see what I
can do. Ken, Although I did not mention this, I had already attempted a
cleaning with 99% isopropyl alcohol and some Q-Tips and cleaning pads, but
had not yet opened the case so could not do as thorough a job as I could so
this is a good next step. JJ, yes, I was aware of the capacitor aging
problems and have observed occasional evidence of this over the last three
or so years with strange behavior, especially when the battery was not
completely fully charged. This is pretty much why I have resigned myself to
ultimate replacement, but I still would like to get it working if this can
be done very cheaply because I will likely choose to change tape formats (go
still smaller) and would like to be able to use it long enough to recover
tapes already made to other media.

Is there a service manual available anywhere on the web that would help me?
I have never worked on an 8mm unit before, although I pretty much try to fix
anything I can (TVs, various household appliacances, computers, automobiles,
etc.) and have been successful fixing several standard VHS VCRs (panel micro
switches, tape alignment issues, aging rubber parts, switching PSU
electrolytics/transistors) and even an old VHS camcorder as well.

The basic message here is I don't believe it is worth enough to send it off
for refurbishing and I have little to lose by attempting to repair it
myself.

Bob

.


Bob Shuman

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Apr 22, 2005, 9:06:34 PM4/22/05
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Ken,

I took the unit apart and checked tape threading and alignment and
everything looked good to me. I also checked and everything seemed pretty
tight so I performed the thorough cleaning you recommended (I had cleaned it
previously, but could only get at it through the top cassette loader).
While I was in there I also degaussed the heads. When I was done I checked
it out and it seems to be much improved. Unfortunately, some of the
recently recorded stuff is still not 100%, but is at least watchable. I
will have to use it for some non-critical stuff over the next few weeks to
make sure it is working well again and trust it for an upcoming graduation
ceremony. Thanks for your assistance. I'd still appreciate getting a copy
of the service manual if anyone can point me to where one can be found.

Bob


"Ken Weitzel" <kwei...@shaw.ca> wrote in message
news:Ru8ae.1107333$6l.1049784@pd7tw2no...


> Hi Bob...
>
> I'd urge you to forget all about electronic adjustment and
> instead focus on mechanical problems...
>
> Start with a good thorough cleaning... the tracking head,
> the pressure idler, the video heads, the capstan and idler,
> and the audio head. A little isopropyl alcohol and a bunch
> of q-tips. A little - moist q-tips, *not* wet.
>
> Pay particular attention to the capstan idler. No flat spots,
> indents from the idler? Does it line up perfectly with the
> idler?
>
> Look at the audio head - it's spring loaded for azimuth
> adjustment. Still sitting normally?
>
> Check the supply hub, clean it well.
>
> Then, after completely absolutely dry, I'd watch it play
> a tape. Supply side feeding tape smoothly, not jerking.
> Nothing skewing the tape.
>

> Ken

Ken Weitzel

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Apr 22, 2005, 9:19:34 PM4/22/05
to

Hi Bob...

Here's some Sony camcorder manuals... hopefully yours
might be available (free, btw)

http://schforfree.seedhost.com/archive/?path=Sony%2FCamcorder

Ken

Bob Shuman

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Apr 22, 2005, 9:23:03 PM4/22/05
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Looks like the schematic and signal diagrams are there for my camera, but
not the full service manual.

"Ken Weitzel" <kwei...@shaw.ca> wrote in message

news:Gohae.1108680$8l.1021198@pd7tw1no...

spudnuty

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Apr 23, 2005, 12:21:03 AM4/23/05
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Bob,
The tape path adjustment is as JJ discribed and without the "adjustment
remote commander" and a scope you won't be able to perform the
adjustment. I have the manual for the TR88,98 and 99 and the adjustment
procedures are pretty similar in all the manuals I've seen. They are
contained in "Tape Path Adjustment" of the "8mm Video Mechanism Section
Adjustment Manual VII [B Mechanism]'. I think the "A" was the one that
ejected out the back. This was a seperate manual that Sony put out to
cover these mechanisms. In my experience I've only seen it at Joseph
electronics in Niles, Il. and when I worked at Helix, Ltd, Chicago.
However as JJ suggested you can check the tape guides listed as TG-2
and TG-3 in my manual. Sometimes only one of these has gotten loose and
you can fly it in while playing a tape that you want to recover. Be
careful it's a good way to mess up a tape.
As to the fish caps you can search this forum for many discussions of
this problem. Usually if you're having this problem you've got video
problems as the CCD-TRxx cameras that I've looked at have those bad
caps only on the video boards on the back of the lens. I have never
seen them on the controller boards for the player/recorder. ESR meters
are great for this.
Richard

webpa

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Apr 24, 2005, 6:01:52 PM4/24/05
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It is fairly unlikely that you are going to be able to fix this thing.
First: All 8mm and newer consumer video tape formats use the video
signal for "tracking" adjustment. There is no "tracking head" or
"control track" as in VHS and Beta(max). There is no adjustment you
can make without a special wired remote control (RM95) or a computer
emulator thereof. Second, it is more likely than not that your problem
is mechanical. That is: The tape is not following the correct path
through the machine. From your description, it sounds like
more-or-less normal wear-and-tear...assuming you've cleaned the
mechanism...and not damaged it while doing so. Actually, your
description of the problem does suggest a thorough, professional
cleaning might help. This does not involve a "cleaning cassette", but
partially disassembling the machine and using the correct materials and
procedures (NEVER using cotton-balls or "Q-tips"...which can cause a
kind of damage to the video heads that produces exactly the effects you
describe.)

Overall...probably best to replace the machine with something a decade
or so newer.

Bob Shuman

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Apr 24, 2005, 10:41:43 PM4/24/05
to
Thanks for the reply, but it does not appear you saw my followup. I did
disassemble the unit and cleaned it thoroughly and it seems to be working
well again. Now only time will tell.

Bob

"webpa" <we...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1114380112.9...@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...


> It is fairly unlikely that you are going to be able to fix this thing.

Snipped for brevity

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