View Full Version : VX2000 Sound Snipping/Dropouts


Sam Houchins II
April 14th, 2009, 08:04 AM
One of my vx2000 cameras has tiny little snippets missing from its sound track scattered throughout a recording. It totally destoys the usefulness of the sound. Any similar experiences and hopefully solutions?

Andy Tejral
April 14th, 2009, 08:17 AM
Are you playing back on the same device it was recorded on? Or, has anything happened to the camera inbetween recording and playing?

I had an issue with tapes recorded on a PD170 and played back on a Pany deck that sounds like what you're describing. Alas, I never resolved that issue--just used the PD170 to play back.

In my case, analog out was unaffected. If that is true for you, could you capture the audio separately?

Sam Houchins II
April 14th, 2009, 08:38 AM
Thank you for your reply.
Analog has the same dropouts.
Dropouts exist regardless of the camera used to play back / capture the tape, once it's been recorded with this specific camera.
Dropouts also occur regardless if the on board mic or external mics are used.

R Geoff Baker
April 14th, 2009, 11:42 AM
You describe the classic problem caused by dirty heads -- a thorough cleaning would be my first solution. Note that a thorough cleaning is not one performed by a 'head cleaning tape' -- a professional examination of the entire tape path may well indicate build up on the rollers or elsewhere causing the problem.

I have twice had problems caused the 'tape brand mixing issue' often described as the wet/dry lube problem -- both times a good cleaning, and a discard of all the problematic brand of tapes, solved thee issue.

HTH

GB

Sam Houchins II
April 14th, 2009, 11:56 AM
Thank you for your reply.
Is this a shipping it off procedure? Local camera shop issue? Cotton swab and some kid of cleaner issue? Which direction would you steer me to check?
Thanks :-)

R Geoff Baker
April 14th, 2009, 12:59 PM
I would take it to a 'Sony Authorized' repair facility -- in my community, that is a pro repair shop that is Sony-certified, in some other cities it may in fact be a Sony shop -- or if you have a working relationship with a rental house that carries the same model I wouldn't hesitate to have a skilled technician with experience take the door off the drive mechanism and perform a good clean ... I would NOT suggest you try it yourself. Helical scan heads are remarkably fragile, and even modest pressure in the wrong direction will wreck them.

This all assumes you are beyond warranty -- and that you will take a hard look at whether your tape handling habits (recycled tape, mixed brands, tapes stored in heat, excessive humidity) maybe the cause of the dirty heads.

Cheers,
GB

Sam Houchins II
April 14th, 2009, 01:59 PM
Thanks,
I'm mildly rural here as far as "authorized" repair facilities, but I'll start checking around in that direction.
Except for the very first 3 or 4 tapes a couple of years ago, I've stuck to Sony tapes ever since I found out about the mixing lubes issue, and ran a head cleaner through it then. Not sure what's triggered the symptoms I've been having.
Thanks for your help!