|  | Posted by Steve Guidry on 10/03/05 15:47 
I don't think it was dew or moisture.  My best guess it that some belts wereslipping or maybe a component in the speed control section was
 intermittently failing because of the heat.
 
 Steve
 
 
 
 "Richard Crowley" <rcrowley@xpr7t.net> wrote in message
 news:11jvplkue3ee04@corp.supernews.com...
 > "Steve Guidry" wrote ...
 > >I recently shot a VHS tape (no sneers, please) (grin)  with my
 > >ooooolllld
 > > camera and its JVC RS-s411 dockable.  The room was hot and humid.
 > >
 > > I didn't get a dew indication or shutoff, but periodically the camera
 > > was
 > > surging and then re-locking.  This was accompanied by a picture
 > > breakup and
 > > re-lock on the video coming out of the video confidence spigot.  This
 > > is a
 > > new one for me . . .
 >
 > Hot and humid doesn't necessarily mean trouble if the
 > equipment was properly "acclimatized". But moving
 > quickly between cool/dry and hot/humid is what causes
 > condensation.
 >
 > Are you sure what you saw was condensation and not some
 > other problem (like dirty/damaged tape path, etc.)?
 >
 > > Is there any way to defeat the auto-sensing speed control of a
 > > playback deck
 > > to minimize this problem ?  (I'd like to play it at the same constant
 > > speed,
 > > and ignore the speed fluctuations on the playback.)  And is this
 > > likely to
 > > accomplish a smooth playback ?
 >
 > Some of the specialty dubbing places might have rigged
 > a tape deck to run at a ~constant speed and ignore temporary
 > perburberances of the control track, but this might be a long-
 > shot?  Sounds worse than any normal TBC can handle.
 >
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