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#1
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i used to have mono vcr's.
i bought a jvc hr-a52u stereo vcr. on some tapes (both prerecorded, and ones that i recorded myself) the vcr make an intermitent 'scratchy' foreign noise through the tv speakers. when i change the vcr setting to mono, the noise goes away, but, or course, so does a lot of the normal audio that can be heard when stereo on stereo movies. i tried the jvc with a different tv, and that did not help. i think that this problem is with both stereo, and mono recorded tapes. i tried connecting with both coaxel cable, and rca jacks. the noise is present on both - when together, and when one of them is not connected. tried a different set of rca jacks. tried a different coaxel cable. the connection is simple. vcr straight to tv. nothing else connected to tv. tried exchanging the vcr. new one had same problem. would like to keep the jvc if at all possible. does anyone know what the problem could be. thank you. |
#2
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![]() "copen9370" wrote in message om... i used to have mono vcr's. i bought a jvc hr-a52u stereo vcr. on some tapes (both prerecorded, and ones that i recorded myself) the vcr make an intermitent 'scratchy' foreign noise through the tv speakers. when i change the vcr setting to mono, the noise goes away, but, or course, so does a lot of the normal audio that can be heard when stereo on stereo movies. i tried the jvc with a different tv, and that did not help. i think that this problem is with both stereo, and mono recorded tapes. i tried connecting with both coaxel cable, and rca jacks. the noise is present on both - when together, and when one of them is not connected. tried a different set of rca jacks. tried a different coaxel cable. the connection is simple. vcr straight to tv. nothing else connected to tv. tried exchanging the vcr. new one had same problem. would like to keep the jvc if at all possible. does anyone know what the problem could be. thank you. Dropouts, possible tape alignment problem, inadequate dropout compensation circuit? JVC's have been a bit notorious for this in the past, but to be fair, it's somewhat inherent in the hi-fi stereo recording method. The better the quality of the tape, and the better the machine's alignment, the less of a problem this will be. Mark Z. |
#3
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#4
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it seems that after a week of heavy use, the noise has gone away on
almost all the tapes that i've tried. is it possible that now i will be able to keep the jvc. really like the features (things we used to take for granted, like front time elapsed display, etc. |
#6
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does the machine crackle with its own recordings?
do its recordings play ok on other hifi machines? I suppose from the fact that its gone away the problem may have been an oxide deposit somewhere around the heads, which whilst not enough to cause full snowy pictures etc, is still sufficient to reduce the head output so that the hifi track drops out. With use the deposit has 'worn' itself away. if this is the case then your machine should be ok from now on, (except if you have an iffy tape dropping oxide of course) If the machine was new theres always the possibility that its 'bedding in', particularly the felt brake/back tension pads. If it still has problems playing its own recordings then as mentioned before the 'switching point' may be mis adjusted. This is the playback setting for switching between the 2 heads spinning round, and is (on modern machines) an electronic setting stored in memory. Sometimes you can see the effect of this at the bottom of a picture when you see the last line bobbing about- when the timing cuts off a little too early. This setting is adjusted with a special engineers remote available from JVC. You can't adjust this yourself, you also need an oscilloscope to measure the results. If your machine needs this setting tweaking a JVC centre should be able to sort it pretty quick. Of course if the machine is new and set wrong, you should be asking questions!!! I'm in the UK and its interesting to hear from others that you've had problems with Hifi /tracking over in the USA, we get very few Hifi or switching point faults for that matter. Where are your machines made- Europes are made in W Germany. Perhaps its a site related problem? Andrew |
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