Plugged it into the 1394 port and got nothing no matter what. Then when
plugging in the previously dependable 6-foot cable, got nothing from
that either. Tried wiggling both at various angles to see if I could
establish any connection, get nothing on 2 different computers. So,
obviously something's wrong.
1) Any suggestions for remedies I might try on a DIY basis? An chance
it could be a mechanical physical contact issue and not an internal
fried chip/circuit issue?
2) Any idea what cost for such a repair would likely run? The problem
is, without a 1394 connection, the cam is kinda pointless. Yes, it has
analog out which works but the whole point of the Digital Cam is to be
able to create DV files.
3) Are the 1394 connectors generally fragile or are there brands with
ports that are more robust than others? What do you think I might have
done to cause this or was it possibly just a coincidence? I didn't poke
around the port on the cam at all, just tweaked the end of the one
cable a small amount.
Thanks for all input.
Usually the camera end is 4-pin, and there should never be any power
there, absent an internal short at the 6-pin end - which might not even
have 6 pins in the shell, for all I know. OK, just looked at one - it
does have six pins at the big end.
FWIW, the RS-232 spec explicitly states that the interface electronics
will be immune to any short-circuit or misconnection of the pins. I
have no idea if USB and FireWire have such a provision, but it *would*
be nice.
--
Gene E. Bloch (Gino)
letters617blochg3251
(replace the numbers by "at" and "dotcom")
In that case, a new socket would seem to be required.
Colin D.
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
> FWIW, the RS-232 spec explicitly states that the interface electronics
> will be immune to any short-circuit or misconnection of the pins. I
> have no idea if USB and FireWire have such a provision, but it *would*
> be nice.
Can you advise what RS-232 is? What relation does this have to Firewire?
> "Gene E. Bloch" <spam...@nobody.invalid> wrote
>
>> FWIW, the RS-232 spec explicitly states that [...]
> Can you advise what RS-232 is? What relation does this have
> to Firewire?
Now I'm feeling old...
--
znark
The standard serial interface, used for modems, printers, mice, and all
sorts of other things before USB came along. Has some advantages over
USB, like it works fine from one end of a building to the other and you
can easily make your own cables, but isn't designed to support hubs with
multiple attachments and is relatively slow, especially compared to USB2
Hi-speed.
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
He claimed repair on the cheaper Canon would likely be around 200
bucks- the more expensive one (GL2) would be more. Our solution was to
buy a 250 buck camcorder to act as a Firewire deck, plus it is another
backup camera. We'll take great pains with this one to protect it from
both shock and heat.
BTW, we also lost the Firewire connection on the motherboard of our
main video editing computer. As far as I am concerned, Firewire does
not seem to be very robust as far as hardware is concerned :-(
LOL.
Me, too. :)
--
Frank, Independent Consultant, New York, NY
[Please remove 'nojunkmail.' from address to reply via e-mail.]
Read Frank's thoughts on HDV at http://www.humanvalues.net/hdv/
> BTW, we also lost the Firewire connection on the motherboard of our
> main video editing computer. As far as I am concerned, Firewire does
> not seem to be very robust as far as hardware is concerned :-(
It doesn't seem that way, does it? It's reasonably common to have a
component destroyed by a bad cable or bridge board.
One big issue is loose specs and less than stellar design of the
connector itself. It's surprisingly easy to insert a 6-pin connector
backwards, and this will almost always blow something, as the power
lines get connected to signal. A bad cable can do the same thing;
4-to-4 pin connections are safe, but 4-to-6 and 6-to-6 cables pose a
similar risk.
Since the number of devices actually powered from the FireWire
connector is quite small, I've taken to using specialty cables which
MAY have 6 pin physical connectors at one or both ends, but never have
more than 4 pins or lines actually present. I also (though the
interface is rated plug-and-play) no longer connect or disconnect when
anything is powered up.
I've had the experience of a bad FireWire-to-ATA bridge board (in an
Imation tape drive) taking out three motherboard FireWire circuits
before I caught on.
On the plus side, once you get it connected, it works MUCH better than
any flavor of USB.
Not to mention that it was often a challenge to get RS-232 to work.
Others answered the first question. That you had to ask made them feel
old, and to tell the truth, it also makes me feel old :-)
I thought the second was obvious...
OK - I gave an example of a useful property of an older spec and
suggested - or at least hoped - that the newer one might, by analogy
and good engineering, have the same property.
:-)
>>> Can you advise what RS-232 is? What relation does this have
>>> to Firewire?
>>Now I'm feeling old...
Baudot TTY anyone?
No need to feel old. All this is still being used by radio-amateurs around
the globe, and also commercial-stations like weather-forecast for marine.
73 de PH5TAE :-) -martin-
--
apple's firewire is a horror! my maxtor drive with firewire port doesn't
recognized at time and I have to turn the drive off - disconnect the
cab;e - turn the drive on - reconnect the cable. also, my canon
camocorder's firewire port was fired. it was my fault but WHO designed a
port that is so fragile?
As others have mentioned, after having gotten this close look at how
it's configured, I'm really surprised how flimsy a design it is. The
cable end seems to have way too much ability to wiggle around and
inadequate strain relief given how little margin there seems to be for
the contacts range of motion. I'm surprised I haven't had problems
before this. From now on I'll tape the cable to the body of cam
instead of just letting it hang.
Sony's goal is not to get you to keep the same piece of equipment forever.
I assume you meant the camera port.
Congratulations on the heroic and successful improvising. It's cool
that you were a successful toolmaker!
Too bad it was needed - I'd say it's not just surprising, but
irresponsible, that it's so flimsy.
Now that you have the faulty pin working, you might consider adding a
Firewire to Firewire adapter like the one shown at:
http://www.lindy.com/us/productfolder/07/70395/index.php
By "permanently" installing this adapter, and then possibly even cementing
it into the damaged socket, you have transferred any future stress and
mechanical wear from the weak and fragile repaired 4 pin connector to a new
(and larger) 6 pin connector which should absorb some if not all of the
punishment better.
The adapter is cheap, adds very little weight or bulk to your camcorder, and
may prevent future damage which may otherwise not be easily repaired using
your prior method.
Smarty
"Gene E. Bloch" <spam...@nobody.invalid> wrote in message
news:mn.23bf7d6c6...@nobody.invalid...
> FWIW, the RS-232 spec explicitly states that the interface electronics
> will be immune to any short-circuit or misconnection of the pins. I
> have no idea if USB and FireWire have such a provision, but it *would*
> be nice.
Perhaps there is something, but I had a LaCie D2 external drive that went up
in smoke when I connected it to a Firewire port one day. I've also seen
current backfeed into a computer when a power-carrying Firewire device was
plugged into the computer. It did no damage, but it sure scared me when the
computer's fans went into serious overdrive and then shut down.
A better Firewire adapter was installed in the computer and resolved that
problem. I never did figure out why the LaCie drive smoked on the other
computer, but heavy amounts of damage had been done to the Oxford
semiconductor FW chipset.
William
Why would you blame Apple??? I found out the hard way the the chipset
driving the Firewire port can make or break the whole experience. I
don't know what chip set your Maxtor uses but Maxtor chose it and Apple
did not provide it. I hear glowing references to the Oxford's interface
and declining opinions of all other contenders. Similar for your fried
port on your camcorder.
There are cheap connectors and expensive connectors - if Canon chose one
that is too weak for their consumers' needs then those consumers suffer.
Apple can't control crappy implementation but maybe you should buy
more robust stuff. -Guy
What a great idea - thanks for sharing it. -Guy
Smarty
"Guy" <guy.j...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:IYSdnQv4fMDWl-fY...@comcast.com...
Scary.
I guess I am morally obligated to try to find out more about the
FireWire (and USB) specs to see if they have that requirement.
Unfortunately, I probably won't do it :-)