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#3
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Heh, I'm going to have to figure out a way to upscale it to the size of a page but that will look great on the wall!
Anyways I had to get it home to do more work on it, plus photos, so here are some of the cleanest photos you'll probably find on the internet. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() This particular unit was manufactured in February 1980, four months before Pioneer would release the VP-1000 and likely not long before PR-7820's stopped selling under the DiscoVision brand and instead under the Pioneer PR7820 Model I/II/III name. I do not unfortunately have the remote. ![]() I cannot really proceed much further until the rubber hub bumper is replaced. A suggested replacement was part of a bicycle inner tube as opposed to an O-ring. I need to dig through the service manual (I found the FULL thing, it's 135mb!) on how to remove the spindle for cleaning but I cannot proceed to the laser issues until then. ![]() ![]() Like I mentioned with my initial check the laser is good. The mirrors were oh-so carefully cleaned but with a disc loaded the focus assembly drops down and then snaps back up to try again. It does it as well with a disc not loaded (the machine lacks a disc presence sensor so you can operate the unit without a disc installed) but is a lot gentler with the focus attempt, so it does know SOMETHING is spinning but I can't tell if it's because of a pickup issue or the molten bumper causing the disc to wobble too much to permit tracking. The laser is also delightfully dangerous. ![]() The only other thing I still need to research is that there is a battery in the unit! It's behind a panel underneath at the lowest point of the machine where a leak is acceptable and it's easy to clip the leads and remove. I have no idea whit it might be for aside from keeping the 1K dump memory alive for short periods of time. |
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