Name this Symptom

T

Distinguished
Mar 31, 2004
45
0
18,580
Archived from groups: alt.video.laserdisc (More info?)

Pioneer 604.

Put disk in, push PLAY. Load bearing type noise (no actual scratching of
media though).

Movie wont play from 1st few chapter stops but if you advance towards
the middle of the disk it will play OK until the end, where upon the
symptoms are repeatable on the other side.


Watcha' tinks wrong?


TBerk
 
G

Guest

Guest
Archived from groups: alt.video.laserdisc (More info?)

your tracking assembly has gone so far out of alignment that the laser head
can no longer read the disc within the correctional tolerances of the
focusing system. the player needs an alignment job, and there may possibly
be a problem with one or both of the tracking servos. if all the hardware is
good, it's not a big deal to fix this problem-- the player will have to be
serivced by someone who knows what they're doing, and has the proper
equipment to re-align the tracking. it could very well be as simple as one
loose screw or wire.
good luck with it---:)
"T" <tberk@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
news:DQw7d.3858$JG2.126@newssvr14.news.prodigy.com...
>
>
> Pioneer 604.
>
> Put disk in, push PLAY. Load bearing type noise (no actual scratching of
> media though).
>
> Movie wont play from 1st few chapter stops but if you advance towards the
> middle of the disk it will play OK until the end, where upon the symptoms
> are repeatable on the other side.
>
>
> Watcha' tinks wrong?
>
>
> TBerk
>
>
 

T

Distinguished
Mar 31, 2004
45
0
18,580
Archived from groups: alt.video.laserdisc (More info?)

douglas pratt wrote:
> your tracking assembly has gone so far out of alignment that the laser head
> can no longer read the disc within the correctional tolerances of the
> focusing system. the player needs an alignment job, and there may possibly
> be a problem with one or both of the tracking servos. if all the hardware is
> good, it's not a big deal to fix this problem-- the player will have to be
> serivced by someone who knows what they're doing, and has the proper
> equipment to re-align the tracking. it could very well be as simple as one
> loose screw or wire.
> good luck with it---:)


OK, if this is true then all hope is not lost. I thought it might be the
main motor.



TBerk