Hi All!
I’m hoping that one of you can help me with a commercial DVD player problem that I’m having.
The machine in question is a MUSTEK DVDV56L-5C. It’s designed to be multiregional, capable of playing any format to any format. I bought it so that I could watch my PAL disks on an NTSC television. However I’ve been having some problems.
The problems started with minor playback issues. There would be scrambled pixellation, screen freeze (though dialogue would continue) and other interruptions, never very prolonged. I contacted the point of sale (a UK firm) and after some negotiation I received a second MUSTEK.
That machine worked well at first. However just as before problems started cropping up with playback, and these problems culminated in a total loss of PAL playback. NTSC playback is as good as ever and apart from refusing to play region 2 disks the machine is exactly what I want. When asked to play a region 2, there is a brief delay while the MUSTEK attempts to read the disk and then it displays a NO DISK error warning.
Coincidentally after the MUSTEK problem deteriorated this far I spent some time housesitting for my uncle, who also owns a DVD. His machine is not multiregional, and is only intended to play NTSC to an NTSC television. I noticed while I was watching disks on his machine that they had a similar problem to my MUSTEK. They would occasionally freeze and show scrambled pixellation, but never with as much severity or frequency as the MUSTEK.
This reminded me of a conversation I had with a sales clerk here when I was in the early stages of my MUSTEK dilemma. I asked if he could think of any possible cause and he suggested that the problem was not with the MUSTEK but with the television it was working with. The television was incapable of understanding the PAL signal that the MUSTEK was sending. The clerk then said that he had a solution and it would cost me $80. I’m naturally suspicious when sales clerks say that kind of thing so I backed off, but now I’m starting to wonder.
I don’t think the problem is hardware failure. If that is the case I would expect the MUSTEK to refuse to show any disk, and not discriminate between PAL and NTSC. I would also expect there to be some cause – an electrical spike maybe – and I can’t think of any. Besides it would be remarkable if the same hardware failure occurred on two separate machines. It is true that the television the MUSTEK is connected to is a cheap DAIWOO, and I suppose if signal failure is going to happen then it’s likely to happen when hooked to a cheap machine. It’s not as easy as checking the power source, since the MUSTEK although designed to operate under European power protocols is hooked to a perfectly capable step-down transformer.
I think the problem lies with the signal and not the DVD machine. The question is, how do I fix that problem? I’m more than willing to buy a new TV if that’s what it takes but I don’t want to rush out & throw money at a problem without knowing more about what’s caused it and what might cure it.
Any thoughts?
Technical specifications MUSTEK: capable of DVD/VCD/CD/MP3/CD-R/CD-RW/SVCD/DVCD playback. 10 Bit, 27 MHz vid & 96 KHz / 24 bit audio DAC performance.
I’m hoping that one of you can help me with a commercial DVD player problem that I’m having.
The machine in question is a MUSTEK DVDV56L-5C. It’s designed to be multiregional, capable of playing any format to any format. I bought it so that I could watch my PAL disks on an NTSC television. However I’ve been having some problems.
The problems started with minor playback issues. There would be scrambled pixellation, screen freeze (though dialogue would continue) and other interruptions, never very prolonged. I contacted the point of sale (a UK firm) and after some negotiation I received a second MUSTEK.
That machine worked well at first. However just as before problems started cropping up with playback, and these problems culminated in a total loss of PAL playback. NTSC playback is as good as ever and apart from refusing to play region 2 disks the machine is exactly what I want. When asked to play a region 2, there is a brief delay while the MUSTEK attempts to read the disk and then it displays a NO DISK error warning.
Coincidentally after the MUSTEK problem deteriorated this far I spent some time housesitting for my uncle, who also owns a DVD. His machine is not multiregional, and is only intended to play NTSC to an NTSC television. I noticed while I was watching disks on his machine that they had a similar problem to my MUSTEK. They would occasionally freeze and show scrambled pixellation, but never with as much severity or frequency as the MUSTEK.
This reminded me of a conversation I had with a sales clerk here when I was in the early stages of my MUSTEK dilemma. I asked if he could think of any possible cause and he suggested that the problem was not with the MUSTEK but with the television it was working with. The television was incapable of understanding the PAL signal that the MUSTEK was sending. The clerk then said that he had a solution and it would cost me $80. I’m naturally suspicious when sales clerks say that kind of thing so I backed off, but now I’m starting to wonder.
I don’t think the problem is hardware failure. If that is the case I would expect the MUSTEK to refuse to show any disk, and not discriminate between PAL and NTSC. I would also expect there to be some cause – an electrical spike maybe – and I can’t think of any. Besides it would be remarkable if the same hardware failure occurred on two separate machines. It is true that the television the MUSTEK is connected to is a cheap DAIWOO, and I suppose if signal failure is going to happen then it’s likely to happen when hooked to a cheap machine. It’s not as easy as checking the power source, since the MUSTEK although designed to operate under European power protocols is hooked to a perfectly capable step-down transformer.
I think the problem lies with the signal and not the DVD machine. The question is, how do I fix that problem? I’m more than willing to buy a new TV if that’s what it takes but I don’t want to rush out & throw money at a problem without knowing more about what’s caused it and what might cure it.
Any thoughts?
Technical specifications MUSTEK: capable of DVD/VCD/CD/MP3/CD-R/CD-RW/SVCD/DVCD playback. 10 Bit, 27 MHz vid & 96 KHz / 24 bit audio DAC performance.
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