Skip to content
McLarenblog

McLarenblog

Evaluate products and politics for you.

JVC combo deck, DV and VHS, model SR-VS20U

JVC combo deck, DV and VHS, model SR-VS20U

12/28/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

JVC combo deck, DV and VHS, model SR-VS20U

Complaint:
Deck would not load tape.

Repair:
We had a deck that would malfunction if anyone pressed in on the VHS tape on the right hand side. This would skew the load mechanism to jam. Just instruct the user to press inward with the tape at the center of the tape. The tape would also load properly if it was pushed in from the left. The tape carriage when pushed in from the right would cause the tape carriage to skew a bit. A metal tab along the left hand side would bind and stop the carriage from moving. I applied some special non migrating grease to three points that I found were rubbing along the top of the carriage assembly.


Repair, Video
DV and VHS, JVC combo deck, model SR-VS20U repair
Grass Valley 200-1 Video Switcher, Intermittent.

Grass Valley 200-1 Video Switcher, Intermittent.

12/28/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

Grass Valley 200-1 Video Switcher

Problem: intermittent function.

Problem: After about 15 minutes of being turned on, the switcher lights would flash. The buttons would not operate but seemed to freeze the switcher. When I pressed a camera input such as camera 2 and this freeze happened, proper switcher operation would fail. I could press other buttons but they would only switch over to the new source when the button I pressed was down. When I lifted my finder the switcher would go back to camera 2. The toggle feature would not take place. After a minute or two the switcher would operate. As time or heat build up occured, the intermittents would seem to increase in frequency.

Troubleshooting: I checked the power supply voltages. Remember that this unit uses two separate power supplies. The service manual tells you how to check the voltages and note that the voltages indicated on the front of the the power supplies are not the exact voltages you should expect to measure. I plan on placing labels on the front of those power supplies with the exact documented voltages.

I reseated every card in the switcher frame.

I used a cooling spray on the suspected circuit board, the panel digital module, but I am quite careful not to freeze any component, only cool as I do not want to kill a component with drastic temperature changes.

Looking over the switcher flow diagram, the most suspicious board seemed to be the “panel digital module”. Go to book 1 and page 6-17 and go through the “control panel diagnostics”. I did this and everything came up looking ok on the diagnostic pod except when I got to “Function 10: CTL-STT REG”. The manual said to scope pin 7 of U11 and pin 9 of U10. The waveforms looked bad. The manual fails to show the correct waveform but digital pulses should, I would think, look similar to a square wave. Going on to “Function 13: PBUS RD STR” it told us to probe TP8 and gives an expected timing information. The width was ok but the recurring pulse was off. I was lucky to scope this test point when the switcher failed. The waveform looked awful. I had spikes where they should not be.

The pod failed to show any problem as this was a brief intermittent at times and the pod thus was not in a test mode at the correct moment to detect any failure. It was the oscilloscope that showed poor waveforms, like bread crumbs, leading me toward the problem area of the board.

Solution: About an hour before a class was to enter, I decided that some drastic action needed to be done, to get the switcher up and running. I noticed that every integrated circuit was in a socket. I had the switcher for over 8 years and we never reseated any IC chips. I turned the switcher off and waited about 5 minutes to allow the power to subside inside the unit. I used the wonderful tool that came with the switcher and pulled out and reseated each chip on that circuit board. The switcher came up and worked throught the first class with no problems. The switcher has been working for over three months now with no glitches. I went back to scope the test points that showed bad waveforms and found them greatly improved but not pristine. I plan to take my digital camera and shoot waveform images off the scope and put them in the service manual for future reference.

The information here is for educational and reference use only. Decide on your own how to proceed in performing any repair you face. We do not accept any responsibility for this information being entirely accurate. We hope it is accurate. Most of the information posed here has been noted to be significant, used in the repair process, and to some extent tested for accuracy through the actual discovery and recording of performing a repair. If you decide to use any of the information here, try to keep in mind that a number of factors may change when you attempt the “same” repair. Models do change from apparently being same units. Their are definitely different methods of making a repair. The steps that you should use to achieve a successful and expedient repair might be different. The problem you face with a piece of equipment might be similar but not an exact match to what we faced. Just use common sense and always be a bit skeptical of following our methodology until you feel that you and we share the same viewpoint and tactics.  

[amazon_link asins=’B01DML1Z8Y,B01DML21AU,B01DML23W6,B01DML1WVE’ template=’ProductGrid’ store=’mclarenblog13-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’7cabb528-8c66-11e7-91a2-a199aa1f31bf’]


Repair, Video
Grass Valley 200-1 Video Switcher repair of intermitten
Repair – Arriflex Camera, Model S, Motor Speed Problem.

Repair – Arriflex Camera, Model S, Motor Speed Problem.

12/28/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

Arriflex motor for the S camera which uses a large power transistor on the side of the motor.

Complaint: motor would race in speed.

Repair: The motor must float electronically and therefore can not touch the case. There are four screws holding the transistor in its holder assembly. Make sure that each of the screws are not touching the transistor body. I had to place a very short piece of spaghetti along the screw shaft where it might come into contact with the transistor. I used only two spaghetti pieces on to the screws that actually reach the camera body. The other two screws only reach the base plate and can therefore touch the transistor.

Please understand that the mounting block for the transistor is composed of three plates. There is a large non conductive block on which the transistor rests. Over that transistor is a metal, conductive plate. The top plate is non conductive.

A real quick fix is to loosen the four screws and center the transistor so the two screw mounting holes that might touch the mounting screws will not touch. Loosen just enough so you can take a small tool and tap the transistor in proper place. Then tighten the four screws down snug. An ohm meter can be used to read from the screw to the transistor body. You should not read below 4ohms on the two screws that reach the main motor housing. The two screws that do not reach the main motor housing will read as a direct short which is normal.

Arri S Motor with power transistor.

The information here is for educational and reference use only. Decide on your own how to proceed in performing any repair you face. We do not accept any responsibility for this information being entirely accurate. We hope it is accurate. Most of the information posed here has been noted to be significant, used in the repair process, and to some extent tested for accuracy through the actual discovery and recording of performing a repair. If you decide to use any of the information here, try to keep in mind that a number of factors may change when you attempt the “same” repair. Models do change from apparently being same units. Their are definitely different methods of making a repair. The steps that you should use to achieve a successful and expedient repair might be different. The problem you face with a piece of equipment might be similar but not an exact match to what we faced. Just use common sense and always be a bit skeptical of following our methodology until you feel that you and we share the same viewpoint and tactics.

Cine (Film Equipment), Repair
Arri S camera, Arri S camera problems, Arri S motor problem, Arri S troubleshooting
Troubleshooting Arri S 16mm Camera Problems

Troubleshooting Arri S 16mm Camera Problems

12/23/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

Troubleshooting the obvious and less obvious:

Camera will not run.

  • Check to make sure the motor clamp is snug. The camera motor body is the return electrical path and must be touching the motor housing clamp tight enough for a good electrical contact.
  • The film buckle switch might not have been set properly. Open the sprocket wheel mechanism and then close. You don’t see it but a little plunger resets the film buckle switch to the “ON” position by open and closing the thread mechanism.

There are times when the film buckle switch just will not set properly. There is a small pin that is the film buckle switch over ride. This is another switch that bypasses the film buckle switch to allow the camera motor to run. In theory the film buckle switch will shut down the camera when a film frame is not advanced but the internal sprocket wheel continues to pull film out of the film pressure plate. When a couple of frames are not moved forward out of the aperture then the bottom or take up side film loop will diminish thus putting pressure upon the pressure plate. Inside the camera is a small roller that is located below the sprocket wheel and in the path of the bottom film loop. When that loop shrinks in size due to missing film frames, this roller will be pulled upward and trigger the film buckle switch thus shutting down the camera. Some times it is imperative that the last take be protected and the camera operator needs to wind a turn of film forward to protect the last shot. The film buckle over ride switch will allow you to do this. Just press in on the little pin near the on/off switch and then turn the camera on. Note: The film buckle over ride switch allows you to determine if the film buckle switch remains off even when you reset it.

  • The original Arri S power cable typically breaks an internal wire within a very close distance from the camera. With no film loaded, press down on the power switch and try to move the power cable up toward the camera or if that fails any direction. If you discover that the camera power cable in intermittent and you have to use the camera in the field, determine the best means of taping the cable so it will run. Note: Some institutions and rental houses have modified their cameras to avoid using the original Arri power cable as they are exceedingly hard to find and if you find one are usually over priced.

You can not see an image.

  • Obviously, there is a lens cap and I would hope that that cap is not on the front of the lens.
  • The viewfinder might have a cap over it. Swing the cap out of the way. Some cameras have an automatic iris that closes out the light from the viewfinder unless the operator places his or her eye up to the viewfinder and presses against the eye cup. The pressure opens the iris and allows the operator to view and image.
  • Each lens has a iris adjustment. Rotate the iris ring to full open.
  • The viewing mechanism employs a front surfaced mirror to direct the lens image to the viewfinder while the film is being pulled down inside the camera. It is a 50/50 percent chance that when the camera is stopped that the shutter is open allowing the lens light to the film but denying you the ability to see anything from the camera viewfinder. The solution is simple. Just rotate the camera motor shaft a bit, that is the little knob at the rear of the motor until you see the image.
  • Are you using a telephoto lens or zoom in full zoom in setting? It is quite possible to be so closely zoomed into a blank wall or other surface that nothing will appear in the viewfinder. Pan or choose a wide angle lens.
  • The camera has three lens mounts. Make sure that you do not have the lens turret set between lenses. If you are not using all of the lens cavities, you are expected to put in a lens cap type of plug to block light and dust from entering the camera. Make sure you have not turned the lens turret to where there is no lens but a plug.

Image is out of focus.

  • Did you set the diopter first? Setting the diopter is the first step you should complete before thinking about using any lens. Just take the camera with or without a taking lens and shoot something blank like a white wall, the north sky if outside, or the sidewalk. Concentrate on a ground glass image in the viewfinder. Make darn sure that that ground glass is as sharp as you can make it for your eye by rotating the diopter ring close to the eye cup. Most Arri S cameras come with a target on the ground glass which makes finding ground glass focus pretty easy. It is possible to come across a camera without a target scribed into the ground glass surface. Just concentrate on the ground glass grain until it looks as sharp as you can get it. Whenever any camera person uses the camera, that person and only that person must reset the diopter. Never set the diopter for another camera person!
  • Now that the diopter is properly set, do not change it but lock it in place using the viewfinder lock ring.
  • Take the lens you intend to use and set it to infinity focus. The infinity marking on a lens is a figure “8” laid on its side. Infinity is a fantastic way to calibrate a lens or check its calibration.
  • Take the iris ring found on the lens and open it ALL the way. Do not stop it down one little bit. It must we wide open to remove any depth of field. [Dept of field is the area between a near and far point from the lens that shows acceptable focus.]
  • Through the viewfinder, look at an object with fine thin lines at infinity. Now lets get real here. Just pick an object at least a quarter a mile away. Power poles, power lines, high rise buildings with windows, edge of a tall building, tall trees, etc are really good objects to pick. Now we are going to concentrate on the fine lines of one of the far distant objects. Rotate the lens focus ring and rock the ring back and forth until you get the best focus.
  • Is the image sharp? Take into consideration that the image is composed on to a ground glass and the image by definition can not achieve any fantastic detail with this method but it should look sharp.
  • Look at the setting of the lens focus ring. Is it right on the infinity mark? If it is not, either you did the diopter adjustment wrong or the lens is out of calibration.

Image seems out of focus (more rigorous check).

  • Obtain a Siemens star target and place it at a convenient distance from the lens. This will require that you also have a tape measure. Look at the lens and look at the lens markings for distance. Choose a distance from the camera corresponding to a mark found on the lens. For example a lens mark might show 10 feet. If a lens is set to be in best focus at 10 feet but is not when we look though the viewfinder, then there is an error. If we choose 10 feet for the Siemens star then place that star image 10 feet from the camera. Most cameras have a film plane marking to indicate distance measurements. On the Arri S is on the opposite side of the operator close to the matt box attachment. The mark looks like a circle with a line running through it. One of the tape measure should be placed at that mark. Place the target Siemens star at a precise distance from the camera which is the
    SAME as the distance you set on the lens.
  • Perform the viewfinder ground glass focus as described above. Make darn sure this is as precise as you can get. If you get the ground glass calibration wrong this whole method falls apart.
  • Now open the lens all the way. We want minimal depth of field.
  • Rotate the focus lens ring back and forth to make the Siemens star appear as sharp focus as you can get. If you had chosen 10 feet, you will be rocking the focus ring closer than 10 feet and further than 10 feet to find the best, sharpest Siemens Star Chart image. Please remember that ground glass focus method is not going to be immaculate because the ground glass will soften any image. Just concentrate on the lines you see in the lens of the Star Chart and stop when the target gets sharp. The beauty of the Siemens Star Chart is that the center of the target goes out of focus in a hurry with any small deviation from perfect focus.
  • Now with the lens left where you found the best focus, compare the lens focus ring reading to the measured tape distance of the Siemens star to camera film plane distance. The two distances should be within four inches of each other. It they are not then a problem exists with the camera or the lens. Do not use the camera but return it to checkout or rental house and tell them that the tape vs eye measurements do not coincide.

Tip: Perform this procedure a few times and to see that you get the same results.

Obtain Siemens Star Chart   It is a good idea to take the printed Star Chart and glue it to a flat surface that you can carry around with you.

NOTE: Lens back focus is different with each model camera. Lens back focus is the distance behind the lens where the real sharp focus occurs. This sharp focus must occur on the film emulsion as it sits in the film camera aperture. Occasionally we send in our zoom lenses for collimating. We provide a camera with the lens. Some zoom lenses are matched for a particular camera. In addition, an exact lens opening on the turret is optimum and sometime comes with a special marking. For most student projects you should not care which zoom lens goes with which camera. In the professional field you will take great care that the lens properly matches the correct camera. In any case, do not use lenses intended for another camera as the back focus might and probably will be wrong.

The information here is for educational and reference use only. Decide on your own how to proceed in performing any repair you face. We do not accept any responsibility for this information being entirely accurate. We hope it is accurate. Most of the information posed here has been noted to be significant, used in the repair process, and to some extent tested for accuracy through the actual discovery and recording of performing a repair. If you decide to use any of the information here, try to keep in mind that a number of factors may change when you attempt the “same” repair. Models do change from apparently being same units. Their are definitely different methods of making a repair. The steps that you should use to achieve a successful and expedient repair might be different. The problem you face with a piece of equipment might be similar but not an exact match to what we faced. Just use common sense and always be a bit skeptical of following our methodology until you feel that you and we share the same viewpoint and tactics.  

Cine (Film Equipment), Repair, Video & Film
Arri S camera problems, Arri S problem solver
Video Production Advice

Video Production Advice

12/23/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

Never let them see you sweat. (All production personnel, especially talent)

Focus on the eyes. (Camera operator)

Cheat whenever possible. (Camera operators.)

The crew members must never let the person(s) paying for the show know there is a problem. Quietly take care of it. (Crew).

Camera operators must tell the director before the show begins of any camera operation deficiency. (Camera operators).

Never bring a two way radio close to a video camera. (Crew).

Audio people, never give talent a wireless microphone that you have not checked out as operating perfectly. (Audio).

Make sure anything that can go wrong does not go wrong. (Engineering).

Arriving early is being on time. Arrive on time is late. Arriving late is excuse for being fired. (Everyone).

Label all video tapes and other media. (Audio and tape operators).

F_ _ _ the truck. (Rule for mic lines). This means the male end plugs in at the truck.

F_ _ _ talent. (Rule for PL or RTS lines). This means that the male end of the mic cable plugs into the intercom box being worn by talent or taped to the table talent will be using during the show.


Video & Film
TV Crew rules, Video Production Rules
No Guns for Iraqi Police Women

No Guns for Iraqi Police Women

12/13/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

In the Los Angeles Times article on the front page of the December 11, 2007 issue an article titled “Iraq to disarm female police”. The reason given was many but none were cited as definitely proven as most important. The decision apparently came from the Ministry Of The Interior. Some “explanations” were apparently given but none seem to be stated officially. One quote was “Females are taken care of by men …”. Another reason was that the pistols were needed for new male recruits. The Times article seemed to punch holes in all of the arguments. One could say that this is none of our business. A far away country should handle their own problems and who am I to make comments upon the life style of another being or country. I seldom get incensed with newspaper and magazine articles but this really set me off. Here are some reasons why.

In the book Science Goes To War by Ernest Volkman, he writes about how a “leading Arab philosopher Ghazzali, concluded that the treasure of ancient texts represented social dynamite.” The author then goes on to explain that the solution to this problem was to keep science documents away from all but the “ruling circle”. The author then draws the conclusion that the Arab nations could not gain advantage from science because they limited its dispersal into the education of the people. The book makes a very solid case that science and war lay in the same bed. Out of science comes better war machinery. We see today the results of this flawed policy by the “ruling caliph of Baghdad”. This decision by the ruling class apparently had the long-term outcome of placing the Arab empire in a technological inferior position. Today, the Arab nations need to buy their weapons from more advanced countries. Foreign nations some times occupy their lands and dictate policy for the region. The effective removal of science from the education of the population removed a component of success, namely the ability to create better weapons.

By removing half the population, namely women, from completely contributing to the social fabric, now taking place in many Arab nations, will result in what outcome? Do we have to wait centuries or millennium to find out?

There are correct and incorrect ways to live. You diminish your chances to survive by making the wrong decisions for the circumstances that you confront. The Arabs chose to remove science because it conflicted with religion. They are choosing to remove women from the work place because it conflicts with religion. Subjugating half your population does not seem to be a positive outcome decision.


Commentary
Iraq, LA Times

Posts navigation

OLDER POSTS
NEWER POSTS

Categories

Archives

© 2026   DEMOCRACY 4 ALL