I haven't seen this posted before, so here it goes.
I got a few broken VTR's to cram a DNA30 into, and started poking around. Both I received had the dreaded NON error and were first gen VTR's (The spinning ring). A DNA30 with a bad connection is no use, so I ripped one apart to diagnose it.
Photos of the 510 connector and the parts are here:
VTR 510 Spinning Connector - Imgur
There are 2 pins in the first gen connector; one you can see, that floats in the insulator, and another that butts to it below it. The bottom is spring loaded, and under ideal conditions pushes against the floating connector to make the connection for the positive side of the connector.
Unfortunately, if you carry your VTR around you can get gunk and other crud built up between that connection. As the connection point between the two gets smaller, you get the resistance fluctuating, until eventually it severs the connection.
This means, if you yank the pin out, you can stick the thinner portion of a qtip down in there and clean the crud off. Then you get things back to normal. I just did this on one of the VTR's and went from completely non-functional 100% NON error to working perfectly regardless of how I rotate the ring.
I initially assumed wrongly that you could not clean that pin without ripping it apart like I did in the the first album. Thankfully I was wrong
Photos here:
1st gen VTR NON error fix - Imgur
This is cross posted to ECR as well.
I got a few broken VTR's to cram a DNA30 into, and started poking around. Both I received had the dreaded NON error and were first gen VTR's (The spinning ring). A DNA30 with a bad connection is no use, so I ripped one apart to diagnose it.
Photos of the 510 connector and the parts are here:
VTR 510 Spinning Connector - Imgur
There are 2 pins in the first gen connector; one you can see, that floats in the insulator, and another that butts to it below it. The bottom is spring loaded, and under ideal conditions pushes against the floating connector to make the connection for the positive side of the connector.
Unfortunately, if you carry your VTR around you can get gunk and other crud built up between that connection. As the connection point between the two gets smaller, you get the resistance fluctuating, until eventually it severs the connection.
This means, if you yank the pin out, you can stick the thinner portion of a qtip down in there and clean the crud off. Then you get things back to normal. I just did this on one of the VTR's and went from completely non-functional 100% NON error to working perfectly regardless of how I rotate the ring.
I initially assumed wrongly that you could not clean that pin without ripping it apart like I did in the the first album. Thankfully I was wrong
Photos here:
1st gen VTR NON error fix - Imgur
This is cross posted to ECR as well.
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