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atsampson |
Posted: 19 Jun 2019, 12:51
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atsampson |
Posted: 23 Jan 2023, 01:31
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You can indeed view the lead-in and lead-out in service mode, but most discs have either black or colourbars in the lead-in and lead-out, so it's not very exciting. I've only found two discs that have anything else in the lead-in...
Louvre 1: Peintures, dessins (1989) [LOUVRE 1] has colourbars, then a few frames of a caption saying what the disc is: frame_pal_chroma_ar43_102_Louvre1_CAV_PAL_ANA_side1leadinbars_4400_2020-01-04_15-29-00.tbc.jpg
Pioneer LaserDisc Reference Disc (2001) [GGV1069] has black, then a 30-second animated countdown before the disc starts at frame 1: frame_ntsc_chroma_ar43_7_ggv1069-countdown.tbc.jpg
Going back to the poster's original question, if you've got access to a programmable remote control (or something else that can send IR codes, like a Raspberry Pi) then I'd try sending it the ESC TEST sequence that most Pioneer players respond to. There may also be a test jumper near the player's CPU that you can short to ground when turning the player on to start up in service mode. |
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atsampson |
Posted: 26 Mar 2023, 00:24
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Criterion's releases of Taxi Driver are another example of this: there are two versions of CC1219L, and three versions of CC1218L.
(And there are probably plenty of examples where two publishers happened to choose the same numbering scheme, e.g. 10004 and 10004.) |
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atsampson |
Posted: 28 Mar 2023, 13:19
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