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 Posted by Anim8rFSK on 12/02/06 17:11 
In article <51ltm2pbmj4762khbsuetnuc9c9v6i872d@4ax.com>, 
 Jaime M. de Castellvi <3cjmd@comcast.net> wrote: 
 
> On Wed, 29 Nov 2006 21:44:36 -0800, JoeBloe 
> <joebloe@thebarattheendoftheuniverse.org> wrote: 
>  
> >On Wed, 29 Nov 2006 21:03:40 -0500, Jaime M. de Castellvi 
> ><3cjmd@comcast.net> Gave us: 
> > 
> >> I have no choice but to 
> >>conclude that the player is the thing. 
> >> 
> >>Short-term fix (hopefully)?  I just got myself one of those head/lens 
> >>cleaning disk, we'll see if it does any good.   
> > 
> >  Try taking a known "failed" disc.  Place it in the player, and turn 
> >the player upside down and see if the freeze occurs. 
> > 
> >  Heads can "sag".  A three year old player is getting up there, and a 
> >combo player likely doesn't have their best transport mech in it. 
>  
> Talk about your built-in obsolence.  Most VCR players used to last a 
> lot longer than three years.  Geez. 
>  
> >  If it does play upside down, its the player.  Not broken, just out 
> >of calibration. 
>  
> There used to be a time when one would call the VCR repair man or 
> would bring the machine down to his shop.  Warranty once expired 
> nowadays, even for something as minor as out of calibration, it is 
> almost cheaper and easier to just get a new machine.  Oh well, it 
> keeps the Chinese gainfully employed. 
>  
> Cheers, 
>  
> Jaime 
 
Same notation for TV sets.  All THREE of Mom's TVs died in the last 2  
months.  Her big beautiful Sony 32" XBR, her bedroom workhorse 20"  
Toshiba, and the little combi vhs/TV that lived in the kitchen. 
 
In every case, the answer was 'throw it out' -- the Sony nobody could  
get parts for, the Toshiba would take 5 weeks and cost more than a  
replacement, and the little guy was way cheaper to replace. 
 
Seems a crime to just carry this stuff off to the dump.  :(
 
  
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