I have a sturdy Zenith VR-3300 that developed a problem recently and before
giving up on it for the high cost of a video shop repair I thought I should
ask if it might be easily fixed at home. The problem is that when inserting
a cassette the tape loads, threads itself, starts to play but then stops
almost immediately and retreats back into the cassette shell. I hate to
loose the service of this nice unit and have had the cover off once or twice
to clean things with q-tips and rubbing alcohol but this time around I
cannot see anything obvious that would indicate a problem.
I need a vcr to view the tapes at the university I am attending. I realize
new units are fairly cheap but I'd rather stick with this well designed vcr
that came out when they were considered high end audio/video equipment.
Thanks for the help and advice, Steve.
"Steve" <a...@123.com> wrote in message
news:0yvWb.23838$3I4....@newssvr25.news.prodigy.com...
>Steve:
>This is usually NOT a high cost repair at most VCR repair shops...... you
>are painting video shop repairs with too broad of a brush....... In
>fact, the advice you are getting now comes from a video repair shop owner
>and tech..... so PLEASE go a little easy on the majority of us who are just
>trying to make a living and pay the bills.
<SNIP>
Sofie,
I've read many of your posts in other newsgroups and have the highest
respect for your opinions.
However, I had an experience recently that shows what Steve was referring to
when he said
"the high cost of a video shop repair".
My Sony XBR TV had a problem which I explained in detail over the phone to
the owner of the repair shop.
He said he would send a technician to check it out (TV was too large to take
to the shop) and that the cost
would be $103. That amount would be applied to the repair if I elected to
have the repair done.
When the technician arrived and I told him the same thing I had told the
shop owner, he said the picture tube
was gone and that the TV could not be repaired. He said he didn't even need
to turn the TV on and that if I had
talked to him instead of the shop owner, he (the technician) could have told
me this over the phone based on the
symptoms I described to him and would have saved myself $103. Of course,
There's no way I would have been
able to talk to the technician first.
So I can understand Steve's reluctance to take his VCR to a repair shop if
he can find someone else to help him.
David
"David" <drn...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:xPqdnRGMB6f...@comcast.com...
SJF
Without turning on the television, the in-home estimate from the shop tech
and certainly a discussion on the telephone or internet is nothing more than
a WILD GUESS.
The only certain way to know that the CRT is bad is for a knowledgeable and
experienced television repair technician to take the back off the set and do
some basic troubleshooting with test equipment and maybe a handful of proper
replacement parts.
The symptoms that are observed (even by a technically knowledgeable
individual) can be very mis-leading..... and can involve different repair
procedures and parts, some maybe fairly inexpensive and some maybe cost
prohibitive.
The cost of having the picture tube replaced in any television, especially a
large screen Sony XBR Trinitron would be most certainly cost prohibitive and
repair/replacement is usually not an option for the vast majority of
customers...... now if the television were in-warranty or on a service
contract, that is a different story.
And by the way, to respond specifically to your comment below, there is much
more profit to be made in replacing picture tubes, but it would be doubtful
that customer would go ahead with the repair once he heard the repair
estimate cost.
--
Best Regards,
Daniel Sofie
Electronics Supply & Repair
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> "SJF" <S...@nospam.com> wrote in message
news:TqQWb.30483$1O.23107@fed1read05...
This is my whole point. If the technician had done some kind of
troubleshooting (at least take the back off of the TV and pretend to know
what he's doing), I wouldn't have been as upset to spend the $103. I knew
when I called the shop that I would be charged a service fee for looking at
the TV and that it would be applied towards the repair if I elected to do
that. I also understood that I would forfeit the fee if I chose not to
repair to the TV. The only option I was given was to replace the picture
tube for $1200. Since this really wasn't a viable option, I don't think I
should have been charged the whole $103, maybe half of it.
The technician told me this was his last service call. He said he was
quitting the business because there was no money in it. Hard to see that
when I paid what I did for basically nothing.
We've kind of strayed from the original question...whether the original
poster should take his VCR to a shop for repair. He will likely run into the
same situation I did with my TV. I have also taken two older Sony VCRs to
this same shop (before the TV incident) and had to pay $65 each to have them
diagnosed. Same story as the TV...$65 applied towards repair if I chose to
do it or forfeit the money. I had both repaired at a cost of about $95 each.
About all that was done was to give them a good cleaning.
If you're wondering why I keep going back to this shop, it's because they
are basically "the only game in town" to work on VCRs and TVs. They probably
won't be in business much longer if the TV technician quits because he said
he was the only technician at the shop.
Thanks for letting me rant!
David
I hope you didn't pay the $103.
The shop didn't do the work they agreed to perform, which was to check it out.
I don't care if they sent over a genius with 3 PhD's in TV repair. If he didn't
even turn on the TV or inspect anything inside, he really has no idea what is
wrong.
When troubleshooting a problem, it is good practice to independently
verify what is going on. This is plenty of opportunity for misdiagnosis
due to "cockpit error", when things aren't set up the way a person
thinks they are.
Get your money back or file a complaint with your state's Consumer Protection.
Don
I've recently serviced an old Panasonic NV600 (huge frontloader). New
heads and new rubber. Gave it to my mom. She loves simple stuff
because it isn't complicated :)
e.p.
"Steve" <a...@123.com> wrote in message news:<0yvWb.23838$3I4....@newssvr25.news.prodigy.com>...
Thank you for the reply. From the posts given I would say my problem is that
the rubber on the little wheel that drives the right take up reel has worn
to where it can not do its job anymore. I have confidence to repair most
simple things but the wheel looks pretty well tucked under a lot of stuff.
Is this the type of thing you can buy in a kit that I see others talking
about?
Thanks again, Steve.
"Steve" <a...@123.com> wrote in message
news:bwuXb.25347$972....@newssvr25.news.prodigy.com...
Years ago, on my record changers and real-to real tape recorders, I used to
find the rubber on the drive wheels had oxidized with age and no longer had
a grip on the mating wheel. I usually was successful in repairing these by
sanding off the hardened surface to expose fresh rubber. Use a fine grained
emery paper. Might be worth a try if you can get to the drive wheel remove
it or do the job in place.
SJF
Jeannie
--
To reply to me, remove *spamenot* from address.
Here is exactly what you need.
Your deck is actually a JVC in Zeniths clothing
your best bet is to get the maintenance kit at the bottom of the following
link that runs $13.50 that has all the rubber and the replacement idler
assembly.
http://www.diyvcrparts.com/cgi-bin/web_store/web_store.cgi?page=mbk-93.
html&cart_id=5369275_31574
The kit looks pretty simple, getting to the appropriate parts within the
machine might be hard. I am capable of making repairs having put together a
Heathkit or two. Would anybody dare give me a rough guide as to the
unassembly sequence I should follow. Nothing too detailed just a take this
out first, and this second etc outline.
Thanks everyone, Steve.
"Steve" <a...@123.com> wrote in message
news:43QYb.27399$Mb6....@newssvr25.news.prodigy.com...