That mechanism that flips the laser to the other side is one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen.
@cbmsysmobile4 ай бұрын
Reminds me of the old Nakamichi RX tape decks that flipped the cassette 180.
@maxmaxmann9784 ай бұрын
Reminds me of these Vid: kzbin.info/www/bejne/aHSokK2jpa2WjbMsi=FkRIZBKeqjdSLDBv
@Setsuna_Kyoura3 ай бұрын
Beautiful, yes... But a bit over-engineered. It was probably a pain to get it cheap and to work reliably...
@AltCutTV3 ай бұрын
@@Setsuna_Kyoura Suppose it's needed for the DVD part somehow. My player (a slightly earlier LD only model) the laser cradle simply goes on curved track from bottom to top.
@Dark_Knight_USA3 ай бұрын
@@cbmsysmobile Greetings: That would B called the "Dragon . Each of the 3 types had advantages. 4 near uninterrupted play the 4 track was best, 3rd in line of record quality. 2nd, and my preferred was the swivel head. It offered the near best of the 3 types.
@MrSelfmaker4 ай бұрын
Hi Marc , you dont have to put the motors to a power supply to check, the unit has a test mode where you can check all Motors and Servos by pressing buttons on the front panel. You can activate it by short the test mode PIN to GND and switch on the Unit, the display changes an test mode is active. The Test mode Pin is on the main Bord and sign as "test". If you have a Porblem with spindle low RPM the main Spindle Motor is defekt. The collector is litte burned and you have to change the motor, so the change from A to Side B goes much faster ! Also the time for reading the TOC is much faster. The Motor lost thrust by this Problem. But here it works in perfect conditions, Greetings from an old Pioneer engeneer. Lovley content !
@wholiddleolme4763 ай бұрын
That flipping mechanism was one of the coolest things ever. Ya can see why the unit was so expensive and it wasn't the electronics, but would have taken some time to build from scratch even in the factory.
@alexandermossel64668 күн бұрын
Mark, you are my hero! Your calm approach, your analytical way of trouble shooting, your equipment choice, your reverse engineering skills As a former electronic engineer having worked in Industrial , studio and Hifi environments I wish that I had a mentor like you back then. And always this mischievous smile. Kudos to you man. The best channel on equipment repair so far.
@MrFlyboy19723 ай бұрын
Thanks for fixing my machine Mark. I shall look forward to seeing you over the weekend to collect :-)
@dieSpinnt8 күн бұрын
Great device btw. and thanks to you both for showing this off and that you shared this kinda "hairy" repair for us to watch:) Do you miss anything around the location of your eyebrows, Mister Flyboy? Hehehehe Have a good one!
@davidvivian5964 ай бұрын
What an amazing piece of kit. No wonder it cost £900 when new! But still not as amazing as your ability to understand and repair almost anything electronic, and produce compelling videos! Thanks Mark.
@rol_rob26033 ай бұрын
Today, that would be 2,168.35 pounds 😮😮
@adrinathegreat30952 ай бұрын
Not unusual, I paid £2000 for a dvd recorder back around 2000/2001. It's also worth nothing now.
@tigglepig6 күн бұрын
I love Mark’s relentless cheerfulness.
@philiptate88104 ай бұрын
There's not many things in this world I'm more glad to see the back of than Scart sockets!
@frankywatte56464 ай бұрын
How you remember where all the parts and wires go is a mystery to me. As always great video Mark.😀
@barcooter82484 ай бұрын
probably by watching back footage already shot in reverse
@frankywatte56464 ай бұрын
@@barcooter8248 Yeah, it must be something like that.😃
@JamesTK4 ай бұрын
@@barcooter8248 if you watch the video in reverse he becomes wreck it mark :)
@ricfair99194 ай бұрын
"I think this goes here"
@AstrosElectronicsLab4 ай бұрын
Things have a habit of falling to where they need go/plug in.
@baztess82814 ай бұрын
Great to see you back Mark, we’ve all missed your informative and entertaining fixes 😊 Bringing back the “good old days”
@Fake_Blood4 ай бұрын
Besides the actual repair, it must be so much work setting the camera up between every shot. Really enjoyable watch this one.
@Richard-eb3rx3 ай бұрын
The bottom line is, if Mark can't fix it, it can't be fixed. You can take that to the bank. Mark is "Stunning ", in his abilities to repair electronics. OUTSTANDING !!!...
@Braddurs4 ай бұрын
I didn't think I'd watch a 30 minute video of someone fixing a Laser Disc, but it was very enjoyable and informative to watch. I like the format and presentation of your video. I like fixing and tinkering with electronics too, but have a lot to learn. I'm probably never going to take a Laser Disc player apart, but this taught me some good diagnostic techniques applicable to all sorts of things!
@leokimvideo3 ай бұрын
Incredible machine, you just don't see home electronics like this anymore
@Synthematix3 ай бұрын
Thank god
@dieSpinnt8 күн бұрын
@@Synthematix I think that this claim is not valid for "retro enthusiasts", or people like Mark who are specialized in that kind of repair. We are practically drowning in old grease and rotating, well (over?) specked heavy mechanisms and are always on the hunt for replacement parts. There are many well engineered mechanical, hydraulic or pneumatic, electronic and a mixture of all of those kinds of devices in action these days. You just have to open your eyes. At least I have some evidence for that just by looking at a car, a motorbike or ordinary kitchen appliances or machine tools. What I don't have any evidence for is "god". I guess now we are at full circle, hehehe. Have a good one you both and much fun with anything that is wonderfully designed and put together by our fellow people (including god:P).
@timothy28304 ай бұрын
Repaired one of these myself. Looks like the "Gear Box" has already been changed. They are usually made from brittle plastic (the brittle plastic one looks lighter and fibrous) and the nub breaks in transport (the nub that keeps the laser assembly level on the B-side). For the other commenter that said it worked for a year, then skipped again; try a different grease. I've run into lithium greases that tend to bind on plastic some time after use, never had an issue after switching to a thicker grease. edit: it's AMAZING that entire drive and laser assembly lift is driven by one motor and one belt!
@billdoodson42324 ай бұрын
I cannot figure out why this channel hasn't got more subcribers. It's brilliant.
@SlartiMarvinbartfast4 ай бұрын
I agree. Sadly it's mainly the more moronic and dumbed down KZbin channels grow their subscriber counts at a rapid rate, anything intelligent and genuinely interesting like this brilliant channel takes a long time. Quality over quantity and all that. Keep up the great work Mark.
@puciohenzap8914 ай бұрын
88,4k subs is A LOT for a channel that specific. Mind you that most viewers are probably 30-60 years old 😀
@LizZard19884 ай бұрын
it is quickly rising in popularity, you are still arriving ahead of the curve tho
@brucekellett22694 ай бұрын
I agree Mark is a very clever bloke. I have been watching his videos for a while now and really enjoy watching them and find them quiet relaxing. Thanks to him I found out about JIS screws and the appropriate screw driver sets. I bought a set of Vessel and Sunflag screwdrivers both top quality tools and both Made in Japan and the tell tale punch mark on the screw head a good indicator the JIS screw. I do model railroading and some of Marks cleaning products and tools have been a good guide what to safely use around electronic equipment. Proto 2000 locomotives from the nineties have a terrible grease in the bogies (trucks Americanese) that dries like bees wax. I used shellite to degrease the crud off and a wood tooth pick to clean the gears. I lubricated them with excellent Labelle USA white grease with teflon and they run smooth and quiet. No split gears either. Keep bringing out those videos Mark. I love those retro Amps and various players with the Made in Japan on the back. Cheers from Australia .
@IanKirsanov-ne1mi4 ай бұрын
'cause KZbin hates to admit that there is "geek porn" category.
@AudioFileZ4 ай бұрын
This is likely close to the zenith of consumer electronics. The LD Combi-Player design was brilliant in that it did things no optical disc player was ever envisioned to do when the various optical discs it played were made. To say it breached so many technical hurdles which seemed to be impossible is no understatement. The amount of moving parts and electronic systems boggles the mind. Mark shows his usual fearless never say never mindset to tackling this "kitchen sink" optical player. You, sir, are a prince among paupers in the electronics repairs scene on KZbin.
@DrLoverLover2 ай бұрын
Enormous noise too
@davidrowley-ic6dx3 ай бұрын
A very enjoyable and inspirational 30 mins of viewing … particularly as I still have the previous 909 model sat in my living room!! Wouldn’t be surprised if mine needs similar treatment as it hasn’t been run for some years now. I also still have my LD collection in the cupboard (must be pushing 75 of them) … but mostly now superseded by DVD … then Blu Ray … and now with 4k where possible and where the movie still works for me. Even when I was moving over to DVD, a couple of my LDs were starting to suffer the dreaded laser rot😢. This was the attraction of this series of LD players… they allowed us to cut across to the new DVD format without the anguish of having to have multiple types of player and still access our LD collections. I was, however, always puzzled as to why Pioneer went down the road of the complexity of the rotating head mechanism … I could never understand why they didn’t simply double up on the laser heads and avoid the labour and material costs and reliability warranty risks of that mechanism. I guess the only reason must have been component costs at the time … but the mechanism they came up with and all the additional associated tooling costs really defies belief to me 🤯😵💫🤯😳😱 I do worry now about keeping our current 4k hardware going … there being fewer and fewer optical drives and associated components available to support repairs.
@JonnyFix3 ай бұрын
When you put the top plate back on I said NOOOO you didn't plug in the laser! Good job over all. I hate jobs that seem too simple to be true. Here's hoping it stays good!
@jlucasound3 ай бұрын
I remember a guy in Vermont, of all places, who had a player in the mid to late 1980's. There was a local store that rented these discs out. The same store where you get your gas, milk and other sundries. This was in the middle of nowhere. So cool.
@xrysf034 ай бұрын
Just a hobbyist here... I remember once repairing a late era Philips home stereo mini-set that would not turn off (go to stand-by) when asked. I was reluctant just to trash it, so I removed the hood and watched the thing go through its paces... as far as mechanical things go, there was just the CD tray. And I noticed it wouldn't close completely. Tracked the problem down to a loose rubber string / micro belt-drive. Once I replaced the original rubber belt with a kitchen variety rubber band (much too elastic), the CD tray drive would regain enough muscle to fully "close the door", the "door closed switch" would click, and the set was willing to turn off! That door closing belt was the whole problem! Soon after that, I noticed that the original speakers supplied with the set already sounded like yoghurt cups. Well the woofers' "elastic" suspension/seal around the circumference of the diaphragm was not proper rubber, rather some softened plastic, and as the softeners evaporated over the years, the woofer would no longer woof... And when I attached some decent broadband speakers, it turned out that the mini-set's tone controls were pre-adjusted for the small-volume speaker boxes, and would produce an ugly "boom" on generic broadband speaker sets... so I just scrapped the darn thing anyway. Now watching Mark wading through this beast, I was clutching onto my table with a gut feeling like "just back away and return this to the owner, with a pointer to the nearest scrap yard". A modern fighter jet must be easier to maintain than this clockwork marvel. Ohh those flagship toys of yesteryear... (yester -year? -decade? -century? millenium actually :-)
@ricfair99194 ай бұрын
Mark, thank God you were able to get this unit working, so that we could all see the "Greatest Rapper" video ending. As always great job what a beast of a machine.
@damianscott4314 ай бұрын
Mark I believe you'll find the dim fluoro display issue to be the 2 Electrolytic cap's for the displays required high voltage on the power supply board. As for screws, it is important to make sure you use the screws in their intended location as I had a Pioneer laser disc player in for repair which a local service tech and Pioneer service agent were unable to repair. Believe the original tech had used a case screw in the wrong location which was able to cut a PCB track preventing the unit from powering up properly. Oh and that units original fault was tray would not go in properly just needing realignment. Oh and very entertaining video. Brought back memories of repairing them back in the day & also used to own (with 240v step-down transformer) a 110v twin tray varient so never needed to get up to swap a disc to watch a movie (fortunately didn't own a 3 disc movie in my library collection).
@faustoalencar15094 ай бұрын
Hello, Mark. Sorry to bother you. Can you be more specific about those caps? Where would I find them on the power supply or in the front panel itself?
@faustoalencar15093 ай бұрын
Sorry, I meant Damian
@damianscott4313 ай бұрын
@faustoalencar1509 the caps in question are on the power supply board. After having a quick refresh of the 919 circuit found this actually uses 3 caps for the Fluro AC with -27V DC offset - C711 (likely culprit), C712 & C713. There is also C195 on the -27V rail, but this is on the Fluro Display PCB & least likely to be at fault.
@faustoalencar15093 ай бұрын
@@damianscott431 Thank you very much, Mr. Damian. I'll be checking them as soon as possible. Have a great week. :)
@Dark_Knight_USA3 ай бұрын
Back in the day I had a few of those and the CLD-900s in the shop.. They did not like dust or heat. Thx 4 the share.
@NonsenseInBASIC4 ай бұрын
What a wonderful mechanism. I do love the tech of the late 90s. I did have the little brother of this player, the DVD only 717. Beautiful machine that didn’t quite survive a lightning strike.
@CartGoBroom4 ай бұрын
ive done some fixing on some of the pioneer laser disc models in the late 90's, i remember one of my customers complaining he cant turn on his laser disc, as i checked it the primaryu fuse had blown, and when i checked the back side of the unit it says 120 volts, here in the philippines we have 220 volts probably he plugged it directly to the power outlet and as ive told him he says he got the unit from his brother from the USA so yeah great memories, btw thanks for the great video
@MatthewNorthMusic4 ай бұрын
Another brilliant fix, What I like learning on your videos is how to get things apart, thats always a battle. I do wish I still had a LD player.
@richardgusztaw50913 ай бұрын
The tech in a laser disc machine was amazing for the time.
@fretlessfenderАй бұрын
I think it still is!
@tedmich3 ай бұрын
Ahhh JIS screws! The motorcycle guys know that a Philips does not work as well. and nearly every Honda brake rotor/drum will have its retaining screws cored out by people trying a Philips... Great video as usual Mark!
@Trucam20204 ай бұрын
Mark, you are a Master in mechanic engineering
@krnlg2 ай бұрын
Love your videos, and this is particularly good because that mechanism is way more complicated than I expected! 🙂
@rastaman51054 ай бұрын
Laserdisc that,s rare , my friend has a Philips Laserdisc player , it looks the same as that Pioneer LD player , greetings from Assen in the Netherlands , and great job Mark !!
@SassyXR60073 ай бұрын
I always watch marks video to cheer me up, I've learnt things along the way. I absolutely love electronics to
@greenharvestproductions6743Ай бұрын
Thank you very much for your Upload Work on these all the time. Love the old Laser disk
@JMUDocАй бұрын
The runout is MENTAL... that laser focussing gear is doing some _serious_ legwork.
@EngineerLewis4 ай бұрын
That's the funkiest mechanism I have ever seen especially the rotation of the laser head to read the other side of the disc! Thanks for a great video Mark!🤣
@damianscott4314 ай бұрын
Indeed it's also crazy watching and listening to the laser disc spinning down to a complete stop and then spinning back up again but in the opposite direction!
@tiromancino_tt3 ай бұрын
questa macchina è meravigliosa . Mark al solito ha dimostrato nessun sconforto davanti la complessità . In definittiva un oggetto molto bello che avrebbe meritato un tentativo di riparazione anche per il display
@ronboots85253 ай бұрын
Amazing maschine, so much details to consider. all these flatcables etc is amazing. And what a great video again!!
@dcallan8127 күн бұрын
My friend bought a laser disc player just the sound of it spinning up reminded e of some really great nights watching the Star Wars Trilogy and other random films that cost so much more than a VHS tape and the quality wasn't much better.
@richardwoodwards12024 ай бұрын
Hi Mark found your channel a few weeks ago have watched most of your videos, brought back memories of when I worked in the TV repair industry before moving into computer repairs ( Main frames )
@robinsutcliffe_video_art4 ай бұрын
Dim VFD is often caused by the surrounding components. I've had that with a portastudio, it was a leaking (fluid) capacitor, part of the VFD circuit.
@Dark_Knight_USA3 ай бұрын
Greetings: Yes. usually the heat generated .
@fight4uthisway2 күн бұрын
😂 fixes EVERYTHING with the utmost precision, electric screwdriver goes wonky “probably gonna need a new one of these”, I fully support this logic!!
@keymad44 ай бұрын
awesome Mark, Best man for the job always.
@demolpol50103 ай бұрын
You sir. Are a great bloke and a nice chap. Keep on the good work 👏
@vstream73523 ай бұрын
The laser head is the Terminator ! It lits up its red laser and asks "Sarah Connor ?" 😂 Great job Mark !!!
@stevewheeler91844 ай бұрын
nice to see that there is someone around that is repairing old electric equipment as i have an old xenon 2 tape cd and radio 2 speakers that is looking for repair
@johnburrows79384 ай бұрын
Wow, size of those discs…that mechanism is old school cool. Respect it, and respect you to my good man for tackling an intricate job, not for the faint of heart, I would wager! Lol well done
@lucianobellebono58354 ай бұрын
great Mark! you solved the problem effectively. It was not easy but you did it very well. Great job. Greetings from Italy. Bye
@Jammerk404 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed that video! Most of these players you don't find them in such good condition and this one was very clean! Thanks You for a great Video! 😁
@qacomputers33443 ай бұрын
Mark, you're the best, hands down! I'd love to purchase an older Sansui receiver from you if you ever come across one or have one! I've been looking for YEARS! ANYBODY???
@RichardNewman-e1x4 ай бұрын
Great to see one of these again Mark. That florescent display may have just been tired capacitors in the supply. Aside from the filament there is (usually) a negative supply of around 30 odd volts supplying the anodes. Many times on similar displays I've found that the capacitors on the 30Vish rail have gone high ESR...virtually open circuit and replacements bring the display back to life.
@djdoo4 ай бұрын
I think it is more fun and interesting to watch the mechanism working and that huge disc spinning that fast than the picture quality it produces... Great video as always keep it up Cheers from Greece!
@justabout61444 ай бұрын
Love the way it rotates at 6.17 🤣 Keep up the good work 👍
@BarryRudge4 ай бұрын
I just love the way you pull the machine a part with the greates of confidence. I wouldn't have a clue how to put it back together
@FreakyPete3 ай бұрын
He's got a video recording of disassembly to help with re-assembly.
@BarryRudge3 ай бұрын
@@FreakyPete That's pretty obvious, he's actually my son's next door neighbour
@kendalljenkins99383 ай бұрын
It's worth buying old Pioneer stuff just to open it up and watch it run. They over engineered some things, but they beautifully over engineered them.
@FunzieOne4 ай бұрын
Very few channels make me as excited as this one. One of my main inspirations for getting into repair!
@geraldhaggard10183 ай бұрын
That style of cable, I've always had problems with, they are so easy to be damaged!!!! Glad you have the touch!!
@ZiGLH4 ай бұрын
Hello Mark, you have changed my life. I owned a metcal solder iron like you, it's so impressive ! Thanks for your videos !
@flemishdog4 ай бұрын
I've the same model. My fix for the tempermental B side is to just manually flip the laserdisc over. Such a great model that its worth the trouble
@olivercarlos77764 ай бұрын
My daily dose of relaxation.. watching your videos😊😊😊
@nataf104 ай бұрын
As usual, Great job. Love to watch you working. Thank you for sharing.
@ianhuxstep2114 ай бұрын
Once again a great video, This unit is very different from the Phillips VLP700 laser disk players I repaired many years ago.
@ScienceAppliedForGood4 ай бұрын
A master class in repairing elector-mechanics.
@brianwood52204 ай бұрын
Nice one, Mark. I know you have a business to run, but it would be nice to see you post a little more often. Thanks for sharing.
@jondobbs4 ай бұрын
I bought and sold these 20 years ago - laserdiscs split over time but loved collecting the films
@mjpenp21474 ай бұрын
Jaysus...! That is one big beast! Great viewing as always.
@davidcraig88054 ай бұрын
im very surprised you didnt have ago a fixing the led display mark, you always seem to have a fix for everything else in your videos, grest to see a true craftsman at work
@AstrosElectronicsLab4 ай бұрын
It's a VFL (vacuum fluorescent) not LED. When they start to go dim like that, it's usually the filaments starting to break down. You have to replace them, and most likely will be unobtainium.
@karelmensik26983 ай бұрын
@@AstrosElectronicsLab In many devices the power supply for anode voltage goes low. Usually there are electrolytic caps in series from the transformer winding, those pass the current through. As they loose capacity, the display dimms. Fixed that on various hifi units.
@AstrosElectronicsLab3 ай бұрын
@@karelmensik2698 that is also true.
@uriel-heavensguardian89492 ай бұрын
This is so satisfying!!! The level of patience to do this work is awesome.
@Bloke-in-Stoke4 ай бұрын
Great job sir. While my own TV career focused mainly on video recorders and early satellite boxes such as Amstrad and Salora, I did do my fare share of CD players. Never got to work on Video Disc but all the mechanics looked so familiar, I would have gladly jumped in, feet first, to tackle any fix that came into the workshop. Thanks again for sharing and stirring up some very happy memories from 30 years ago. Cheers 🍺
@GadgetUK1644 ай бұрын
Brilliant =D I am always amazed at how complex the mechanisms are on these, no wonder they were so expensive!
@eddieMurphy111114 ай бұрын
Jesus, that takes me back they were expensive at the time you were luck finding that fault on the motor, thanks so much for the video
@RebeccaTurner-ny1xx4 ай бұрын
Not luck but careful, logical tracing of the fault.
@sats_nak4 ай бұрын
LD is an amazing medium. both ahead of and behind it's time at the same time.
@Podmetaczacase4 ай бұрын
Finally, a video from Mark's workshop.
@PaulHigginbothamSr4 ай бұрын
Mark: making this ancient player work very well with so many brittle plastic parts. I mean the next time it needs serviced imagine those clips that lock the sections down snapping off to not lock the component to the other piece. Of course I can see Mark making a special clip holder to hold it down. That grease is like 10 times the quality of the original grease which oxidised a bit. You saved it Mark. It is a fine piece of kit as you Brits say.
@puciohenzap8914 ай бұрын
Sticker on the back says April 2000 so it must've been one of the latest models made! 5:13 how COOL is that! Bet the disc wobble is killing the bearings though!
@costaricafamily4 ай бұрын
Incredible mark ! , It has a robot inside !, as always spectacular pioneer !
@djlolerkoster4 ай бұрын
best channel on youtube, not gonna lie
@Outback_Truckie4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. Brings back memories as I had the top of the line Pioneer LD player back in the 90's in my theatre. Quality was the best you could get in resolution at the time and a lot of us used line doublers to improve the picture even more. Now it's all streaming etc and the only disc player I own in my X-Box.
@MVVblog4 ай бұрын
I repaired one myself, it worked for about a year and then went back to skipping tracks on the B side of the laserdisc. I repaired it again and it worked for a few months, but eventually the mechanics gave out. TOP video as always, best channel ever!
@tony3594 ай бұрын
Are we both watching the same channels? 😂
@mcduckuk26 күн бұрын
Loved my Pioneer Laserdisc player. I had a CLD2950.
@pauldavis63563 ай бұрын
Great camera work on the lazer pickup. Fascinating to watch.
@Antonio-gc1cn3 ай бұрын
Amazing Mark! Very very very very hard fixed!!!!
@DaveSimkiss4 ай бұрын
So pleased to hear someone else using the term ‘swanky’!!
@jed2055Ай бұрын
Just discovered your channel Mark and apart from the Tourettes style giggles I've really enjoyed the 2 watched so far. Not a Linus Tech fan what with the ads and splashy video editing and game show host style presentation. I like it clean and pure and your vids do that in spades. Sad to see that other bloke gets 2.8 million views for a snazzy laser disc presentation and you get only 120k views. Good numbers for you mind but I hope you know what I mean. P.S. I was given one of these in the 80's and it couldn't read discs properly. I managed to get it going by increasing the laser voltage and I now know that wouldn't last with its weak laser. Horribly large format and as you said, expensive as heck. Dunno what I did with it but I suspect it went to landfill. No online shopping back then and had just the one or two movies as I recall. Good luck with your endeavours (just as your teacher said 🙂 cheers from Oz
@jlucasound3 ай бұрын
I used to assemble a grabber for a robot. It had SS bars that little pillow blocks rode on. Fiddly things to get to run smooth. There were no slotted holes for the screws. I would get it in the end. I was very pleased with that.
@n2n8sda9 күн бұрын
Awesome work, I think you'll find the DVL-919 was released in 1998.. I had one when I upgraded to DVD's as I wanted to keep my old laserdisc collection too.. one of the last models.
@emersonbiggens15024 ай бұрын
I'll say it again, how the heck do you only have 88K subscribers !?!? You have one of the best channels on youtube.
@KP-nd3bx4 ай бұрын
A good amount of knowledge and some grease and the Laserdisc is fully operational. Good job and c u next time 😊🇩🇰
@abhishekmallik11944 ай бұрын
I have a DVL-909 and watching the mechanism work is mesmerizing. A well build machine. Keep up the good work Sir.
@dacco24 ай бұрын
Some lovely engineering in that, old school.
@HeavyMetalTones4 ай бұрын
I have the Yamaha CDV-1700 and i only use it for CDs but a thing of beauty
@Alexelectricalengineering4 ай бұрын
That's a pretty interesting mechanism, I love your videos 👍👍👍
@robburbrink82774 ай бұрын
always a good day when Mark has got a new video for us. awesome as always Mark, thank you for the time spent making this. keep them coming my friend.
@apu_apustaja4 ай бұрын
All across the land, little old ladies have noticed your upload, got up to put the kettle on before watching, and are currently saying to themselves "I wonder if he gives himself a shock again in this one".
@billdoodson42324 ай бұрын
🤣😂😂🤣
@Ea-Nasir_Copper_Co4 ай бұрын
_looks around for hidden camera_
@user-mv5bu2kk8b4 ай бұрын
Tis not snooker
@joshuacook52804 ай бұрын
Its me...I'm the little old lady
@apu_apustaja4 ай бұрын
@@joshuacook5280 are you sure you are not joshing?
@Thailandescapades4 ай бұрын
Cheers mark,I’m in the category of knowing sweet F.A. About electronics but love your channel.. how very peculiar… keep up the good work
@neiltheplayer3 ай бұрын
One of the best video games was "Dragon's Lair" or Dragon Slayer. It used the Pioneer Laser Disc. The Game was the best for its time, but horribly expensive. Thank you for posting
@alanduncan37103 ай бұрын
I repaired those games back in the mid 80's. They used a LDV-1000 commercial player. It had a visible helium/neon laser. The player had no controls on the front. It used CAV (constant angular velocity) discs so it could jump positions faster. Still have the special alignment tools for adjusting the laser.
@bussypaul73264 ай бұрын
Great to see you again! I was little disappointed because you didn't checked the DVD and never tried to fix the display! I was quite sure that you would fix it with some magic, but you really disappointed me! 😊 See you next time!
@jimbobroon-wj4qx4 ай бұрын
Another fantastic fix Mark… Love the clunky noises from these old players 😜
@jpreza3 ай бұрын
Definitely a labor of love! Great video!
@Speed2953 ай бұрын
Brings back a lot of nice memorys..... The sound on these machines were amazing, same punch as in a great cinema. Dvd was flat compared to LD vesions