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-   -   GL2 Remove Cassette Error Fix (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/canon-gl-series-dv-camcorders/42822-gl2-remove-cassette-error-fix.html)

Bob Thieda June 4th, 2008 04:44 PM

Well let me join the club...
Just got my repair estimate from Canon for "REMOVE THE CASSETTE ERROR.
$62.93 including shipping.

Bob T.

Brendan Underwood August 21st, 2008 06:42 PM

Fix by Canon in Australia
 
Has anyone had or known of someone having Canon Australia cover the majority of this repair? I have called their support line (customer service?...bull!) and they said that if it wasn't on their website, then it wouldn't be covered. Even asked nicely if they could look on their internal systems to see if there was anything, but got told the same thing again.

I would have assumed that if the fix was being covered in the US and NZ, then AU would do it as well. Otherwise I've been quoted AUD$450 to have the problem sorted on my XM2.

Cheers
Brendan

James Holtzman June 14th, 2009 01:32 PM

GL2 Remove Cassette Error fix
 
About a year later, after Canon repaired my camera, the problem repeated itself. I just returned the camera to Canon and the repair charge is now up to $70.00. That was $50.00 labor for the repair and $20 for shipping. I can't complain about that. It too bad that the GL2 has such a lousy tape transport. I've worked on GL1 cams, a completely different transport, probably why we don't hear about GL1's having the same problem.

Jim

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bob Thieda (Post 888426)
Well let me join the club...
Just got my repair estimate from Canon for "REMOVE THE CASSETTE ERROR.
$62.93 including shipping.

Bob T.


Greg Donovan June 17th, 2009 06:27 PM

This is only a $70 dollar fix?! I was under the impression that it was well over $300.

Looks like I will have a working GL2 in the end after all.

I have to find a Canon phone number to call (considering I'm in Canada and I have no papers from the camera since I bought it used recently) but I'm assuming that I can also request the number of hours on the camera? Does anyone know if that is possible with the GL2 or if they would charge extra?

Thanks,
Greg

Ron Edwards June 18th, 2009 06:42 AM

Low Cost Fix
 
Actually the fix could be much lower than $70. The clutch was assembled with too much grease ... if one drop is good then 5 drops is 5 times as good....right. This has been covered before in the past by my self and others. The fix is very easy, takes about as long as it takes to snap you fingers, and cost about $3.50. I fixed my GL2 with one application and that was 3 years ago. Look in previous post for the fix including photo. Just be sure not to use too much cleaner and use a small clean lint free cloth to protect other components.

Won't fix every case...probably only 90%.

Ron

Greg Donovan June 18th, 2009 11:22 AM

Ron,

I'm guessing that this is the post you were referring to. The photos do not work, but I took some of my own and I was wondering if you would be able to tell me if I am looking at the right part.

http://i223.photobucket.com/albums/d...L2/gl2fix2.png

http://i223.photobucket.com/albums/d...L2/gl2fix1.png

Thanks,
Greg

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cosmin Rotaru (Post 318286)
Hi all!

I posted a few days ago that I'm always leaving the camcorder with the tape compartment opened over night, after each wedding. Well, it was not enough, it seems, so yesterday I could not rewind to the end a single tape from 5...

As I'm the DIY kind a guy, I opened up the camcorder ( again! ) to see what's happening in there.

What I found out: it is (at least in my case) a problem with the tape transport. It is not about head misalignments as I've heard. I uploaded a small video to show you what's happening. As you rewind the tape, the tape travels from right to left. You can see in the video that the collecting spool fails to take the tape at the rate it is supplied. I'm sorry but I don't know the technical names for the components so I can better explain,that's why I choose to let you see it and draw your own conclusions.

What I think: as the tape is supplied at a constant speed, the collecting spool has a variable angular speed (because the diameter of the spool+tape increases as it takes the tape). In order to spin at variable speed (when the motor spins at constant speed), the collecting spool has a kind of "clutch" - friction is employed here. Friction that it is lost because of dirt & grease & humidity...

After a couple of hours of trying to get the mechanical assembly opened (I didn't manage to do it...), I found a part that resembles what I was looking for and tried a desperate cleaning process: a drop of spirit (alcohol) between a plastic gear and a metal plate.


Luckily for you, you don't even need to open your camcorder to try this possible solution!
:)


I finally managed to rewind all tapes!

Yet another unprotected part of a canon camcorder..... (like the zoom rocker)


Greg Donovan June 19th, 2009 06:00 PM

YES!

I put some alcohol on a microfibre cloth and cleaned that little piece of friction fabric stuff on the black plastic rocker (with the spring on it) and used a dropper to put a couple of drops of alcohol under the white gear. I then spun the gear by hand and left the camera for a couple of hours to dry.

I picked it up, turned it on, put a tape in, hit play, I played the tape (the cam wouldn't even play tapes and I was having problems when I turned the camera off, the tape was not going back in the cartridge and giving remove cassette errors upon turning the camera back on) and then I went to rewind at slow speed, it gave the error. I turned the cam off and removed the battery for a few seconds. I put it back in and powered on. Tried full speed rewind - success (for only the 3rd time in owning the camera!), I then fast forwarded to the end of the tape and rewound back to the begining a few times. No issues at all. It plays and does slow fast forward just fine and gives the error the odd time (maybe every 3 times) I use slow rewind.

Unless it gets any worse, I don't plan on cleaning it any more. I'm overjoyed right now. Because of the problems I was having whenever I turned the camera off in record mode, it wasn't simple a playback error for me (and I do have another cam to use as a deck) but it was making the camera unreliable for shooting at all.

I can finally get excited about getting this camera again.

Thanks,
Greg

Edit: Ok, scratch that. I have it another couple of drops and it works absolutely flawlessly now. Flawlessly.

Jonathan Kennedy March 30th, 2010 09:47 PM

remove cassete error fix
 
what type of cleaner did you use ?

Ron Edwards March 31st, 2010 07:57 AM

Clearner
 
Go and pick up a spray can on "Contact Cleaner" at Radio Shack. Make sure it has the small plastic piece to direct the spray to a specific point.

First take a lint free cloth and protect the internal parts...especially the heads.

Pre load the spray nozzel and practice a few very short burst then appy ONE SHORT shot to the prementioned spot. Let everything dry for 30 minutes or so then test. If this doesn't fix then try ONCE more. If that don't work then you may be in the small group that has to send the cam in for repairs....good luck.

Ron
Introducing Edwards Video Productions, Corporate, Legal, Internet/Web, Graphics, Wedding, Event, Consumer Video and Conversions

Marty Hamrick March 2nd, 2014 12:57 PM

Re: GL2 Remove Cassette Error Fix
 
I just started on this thread and I didn't read through all the others, so if someone already mentioned this , sorry, here it is again. Here is a youtube where a guy suggests manually rewinding the tape about 10 times.



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