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CED Digest Vol. 8 No. 48 • 11/29/2003 |
20 Years Ago In CED History: November 30, 1983: * Dutch brewery chairman Alfred H. Heineken and his chauffeur are freed by police from an unguarded warehouse in Amsterdam, where they had been held by kidnappers for three weeks. * President Reagan in effect vetoes legislation dealing with social reforms in El Salvador by not signing the bill within 10 legislative days after receiving it from Congress. December 1, 1983: * As the holiday season approaches, the most sought-after - and fought-over - toys are dolls called Cabbage Patch Kids. These male and female dolls have soft-sculptured bodies, chubby faces, detailed fingers and toes, and belly buttons. No two are exactly alike. Each comes with its own name, a birth certificate, and adoption papers. Handmade, cloth-faced Cabbage Patch Kids were created by Xavier Roberts in the late 1970's. Beginning in mid-1983, a less expensive, vinyl-faced version became available. * Rita Lavelle, dismissed February 7, 1983 as head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's toxic-waste cleanup program, is found guilty of perjury and obstructing a Congressional inquiry. * A federal district judge orders the state of Washington to pay between $800 million and $1 billion in raises and back pay to female state employees. * RCA VideoDisc Releases for December 1983: Best of Terrytoons, The (Mighty Mouse et. al.) Boy Named Charlie Brown, A Breaker Morant Children's Treasures Christmas Collection Country Girl, The Court Jester, The Dark Crystal, The** Euryythmics: Sweet Dreams the Video Album Evil Under the Sun He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, Vol. 2 Intermezzo Jaws 3*** Little Big Man (2) Lovers and Liars Making Michael Jackson's Thriller* Mandingo Mechanic, The Michael Nesmith in Elephant Parts* Murder, Anyone? Night with Lou Reed, A* North to Alaska Octopussy (2)** Pride and the Passion, The (2) Raccoons' Adventures, The Risky Business** Six Weeks Snoopy Come Home Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone* Superman III (2)** Survivors, The Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines (2) Twilight Zone-- The Movie** We're No Angels Windwalker Wizard of Oz, The* [1982] XTRO Yoga Moves* December 2, 1983: * The U.S. Labor Department reports a November unemployment rate of 8.4 percent, a two-year low. * Future CED title in widespread release: Thriller (MTV debut). December 3, 1983: * "Can't Slow Down" by Lionel Richie becomes the No. 1 U.S. album. December 4, 1983: * During a series of air strikes against Syrian antiaircraft batteries east of Beirut, Lebanon, two U.S. warplanes are shot down. One pilot is killed, and another, Navy Lt. Robert O. Goodman, is captured by the Syrians. * Jaime Lusinchi of the Democratic Action Party wins a landslide victory in Venezuelan presidential elections. He will succeed Luis Herrera Campins, who had held the position since 1979. * The 6th Annual Kennedy Center Honors are held featuring the honorees Katherine Dunham, Elia Kazan, Frank Sinatra, James Stewart, and Virgil Thomson. December 5, 1983: * A car bomb explodes in a Muslim section of Beirut, killing 14 people and injuring more than 80 others. * RCA PRESS RELEASE: RCA Signs Video Disc Agreement with Bally Midway for First Arcade Use of New Random Access Player CHICAGO, December 5 -- The first use of RCA's new random access video disc player in the arcade game market was announced today in an agreement with the Bally Midway Manufacturing Company. RCA will manufacture and supply both the players and discs to be used in the new Bally arcade game to be introduced later this month. In a joint announcement, David Marofske, President of Bally Midway, and Dr. Jay J. Brandinger, Division Vice President, RCA Disc Operations, said the initial agreement will result in Bally using several thousand random access players in the arcade market. RCA has begun initial shipments of the player, which can provide interactive applications for the user, with the balance to be delivered during the coming months. Mr. Marofske said the arcade game business has demonstrated a potential for further sales growth with the introduction of advanced games that take advantage of video disc features and technology. "The public has shown it is willing to pay higher prices for games that are more challenging and visually exciting," he said. Mr. Brandinger, who is also responsible for the direction of RCA's development, manufacturing and marketing efforts in the area of interactive video discs, said the agreement with Bally "marks a significant expansion of the capabilities of the company's 'CED' video disc system." He noted that RCA had promised the company's first random access player, introduced in late August, "would have applications in the educational, institutional, game and consumer markets." The random access player employs several digital microcomputers to provide a variety of interactive applications for the user. In addition to playing interactive discs for arcade games, RCA offers discs that are banded to allow access to any desired segment using the random access player. RCA plans to release all future stereo music discs in the banded format. RCA expects that by the end of the year more than 500,000 "CED" players will be in consumer homes along with 10 million discs sold since the introduction of the system in March 1981. December 6, 1983: * Leaders of the ten European Community (EC) nations end a three-day summit in Athens, Greece, without an agreement on key financial issues. The body is said to be on the brink of bankruptcy. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: "Steven S. Wierman" <sswierman> To: <digest@cedmagic.com> Subject: Subscribe Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2003 01:36:47 -0800 Hello, I am so very glad that I have found you, we recently, purchased a RCA SFT 100W Selectavision Video Disc Player that still works. It does skip some and I am looking for replacement needle cartridges. It is a great machine and it is fun to watch the movies on the large discs. When playing the picture seems clearer than that of a video tape. Thanks for providing your newsletter. Most appreciatively, Steven S. Wierman ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2003 10:17:34 -0500 From: Dj3928 To: digest@cedmagic.com Subject: Replacement Remotes for Videodisc Players Hello all, Being in the CED Player Reconditioning service, I was very interested in the Replacement Remote website Tom talked about in the last issue of Digest. Like Tom, I have searched high and low for Remote Controls for the Videodisc Players. While the Random Access Remotes are available periodically on ebay, the SGT250/SJT300's are hard to find. I called Replacement Remotes that Tom had mentioned, They do not have either one of the SGT250 or SJT300 Remotes. In fact, the lady on the phone simply said "STOCK ZERO ON BOTH" , so I assume they have never had them in stock. I have tried several websites that list both USED and RECONDITIONED Remotes on their web page, but so far none have any stock on these 2. It was worth a try. Everyone, KEEP LOOKING! Darrell @ cedcentral ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: uh-clem (Robert Armentrout) Date: Sat, 29 Nov 2003 21:45:41 -0800 (PST) To: digest@cedmagic.com Subject: For sale I have the following items for sale: 1. Toshiba Video Disk Stereo Adapter Serial number 48280045. Attached cable and electric plugs. Right and left audio input. Face plate has power switch, stereo switch and ch-A and ch-B switches. Minor scratches on face. Works fine. 2. Toshiba Wired RemoteControl-RM 100. Face plate has Super Scan Play-Fast Forward-Reverse, Rapid Access forward and reverse, and Pause buttons. Minor scratches on face and back-works fine. Will take best offer on one or both items until Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2003. Buyer to pay Shipping & Handling costs. Will ship from Fair Oaks, CA, 95628. (Not a dealer.) Robert Armentrout ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: Tom Howe <tom@cedmagic.com> Date: Sat, 29 Nov 2003 23:16:43 -0800 Subject: RE: Picture shudder on VP2000 To: digest@cedmagic.com >the picture "shudders" every few seconds, and colors keep changing >back and forth between normal and multicolor rainbow-type effects. >Audio is normal. Closest I found to this problem in the tech section >at cedmagic.com was loss of color caused by improper turntable speed, >in turn possibly caused by excess friction in the bearings. (I did >have to "stretch out" the new belt as it was initially too tight to >allow the turntable to spin up to full speed.) > >Is the procedure for turntable removal and bearing lubrication for this >model documented anywhere on the Net? Anyone know of any other possible >causes for this problem? I've added an alternate method of lubricating the F/G turntable shaft to the Repair Solutions page that does not require removal of the turntable: http://www.cedmagic.com/tech-info/repair-solutions.html Go to the entry "Unlubricated Turntable Shaft (F/G)" to see how this can be accomplished from the bottom of the player. It seems the main problem people encounter with removing the turntable via the service manual procedures is getting the two screws off the yoke. They are easily stripped or may already be in a stripped state, which requires grinding out and re-tapping with a Dremel tool and slightly larger tap. Note that lubricating the turntable shaft and/or setting pole spacing to factory spec may not correct the color-shift issue. There are instances where this problem is in the 16-pole magnetic ring around the turntable's inner circumference, caused either by an overall decrease in magnetic field strength or damage to two adjacent poles. Never "play" a disc in an F/G player that does not have a turntable belt installed. In this state the turntable motor is spinning away, generating its alternating magnetic field, but the turntable is stationary, with two of its poles in constant proximity to the two motor sync poles. Prolonged proximity of this sort may de-magnetize the two adjacent poles on the turntable ring. There are a couple ways in which it may be possible to fix a damaged or weak magnetic ring on the turntable. One would be to re-create the apparatus RCA originally used to magnetize the ring in the first place. I've never seen pictures of this, but would guess it consisted of a ring of sixteen powerful electromagnets that fit precisely inside the turntable inner circumference. Each turntable would have been put into this and "zapped" by energizing the electromagnetic ring. The other method would require de-magnetizing or removing the existing 16-pole ring and then gluing sixteen pieces of precisely cut thin magnetic material to replace it. These pieces could be cut from flexible anisotropic sheet which has positive poles on one side and negative poles on the other. --Tom
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