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  #1  
08-12-2021, 06:05 PM
confusedperson confusedperson is offline
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One of the pins in the connector of my S-Video cable broke off and is jammed in the hole. It's pretty far in there and no part is sticking out so it can't be removed with tweezers.

According to other sources online, you remove the pin by heating up a sewing needle or other small, sharp object with a lighter, then stick it in the hole until it cools, and it will pull out the broken pin. BUT this assumes you have access to two things: a needle and a lighter. I don't have either.

The closest I could come to this would be a bent staple heated up on the stove, but I don't know if that is a safe idea. Is there another way to solve this problem that doesn't involve heating anything? Or do I have to blow $300 to $500 on another VCR solely because of this stupid problem?
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  #2  
08-12-2021, 11:32 PM
latreche34 latreche34 is offline
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Use gasket maker, squeeze some into the face of the plug and let it dry overnight, Then pull out the blub of rubber, if you are lucky it will come out if it's too tight than you need to use another trick.
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  #3  
08-13-2021, 09:51 PM
confusedperson confusedperson is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by latreche34 View Post
Use gasket maker, squeeze some into the face of the plug and let it dry overnight, Then pull out the blub of rubber, if you are lucky it will come out if it's too tight than you need to use another trick.
Thanks for the advice, but you caused a catastrophe.

I still don't know what gasket maker is, but I bought a tube and screwed on the nozzle. Unfortunately I could NOT get the stuff to squeeze all the way through the nozzle. It stopped one-third of the way through and no more would go in there no matter how hard I squeezed the tube, so I could not apply this stuff in a fine manner. I had to unscrew the nozzle and do the best I could. I hope it went where it was supposed to but I have no idea how much got in there (see attached picture).

To make matters worse, as I was squeezing, a small hole developed near the bottom and I didn't notice it until my hands were very blue. And you did NOT tell me how hard it is to get this stuff off your hands! I was scrubbing for like ten minutes and blue stuff is still in my fingernails. And I just NOW noticed fine print on the package that says "SUSPECTED OF CAUSING CANCER" so you probably just killed me.

Tomorrow I try to remove it (it BETTER be simple to remove or I'll be back to yell at you some more) but if it doesn't work, I'm not subjecting myself to this twice. I really don't want cancer. Do you have another solution?


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  #4  
08-13-2021, 10:07 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by confusedperson View Post
a needle and a lighter. I don't have either.
This reminds me of friend in college. He didn't have a spoon, blank paper, a pen, or a stapler.
I still don't see how he graduated.

Quote:
Originally Posted by confusedperson View Post
I still don't know what gasket maker is,
Uh ... Google?
https://www.permatex.com/product-cat...gasket-makers/

Quote:
but I bought a tube
So ... why didn't you just buy a needle and a lighter?

Quote:
my hands were very blue.
I was going to make an obligatory Smurfs joke, but then...

Quote:
And I just NOW noticed fine print on the package that says "SUSPECTED OF CAUSING CANCER" so you probably just killed me.
Congratulations. This is now the WTF? thread champion!
I don't recall a more weird thread on this forum.
And it beats anything gamemaniaco ever did, by a wide margin. Ziplock screwdriver DVDs? Nah, pfft. Cancer. < mic drop >

Quote:
it BETTER be simple to remove
I suggest reading the instructions.

Quote:
I'm not subjecting myself to this twice. I really don't want cancer. Do you have another solution?
Gloves.

Quote:
The closest I could come to this would be a bent staple heated up on the stove, but I don't know if that is a safe idea.
No.

Quote:
Is there another way to solve this problem
Buy a lighter and needle this time, not the expensive auto parts goop.

Quote:
that doesn't involve heating anything?
Bubble gum?

Quote:
Or do I have to blow $300 to $500 on another VCR solely because of this stupid problem?
There often aren't stupid problems, but there are stupid solutions. Don't respond to a problem by doing something stupid.

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  #5  
08-13-2021, 10:12 PM
confusedperson confusedperson is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lordsmurf View Post
I suggest reading the instructions.
There are no instructions on the tube or the packaging for removing the stuff. From Post #2 I was led to believe I could just pull it off once it gets hard. Is that not the case?

UPDATE: https://www.google.com/search?q=remove+gasket+maker

I don't see anything here that suggests you can just pull it off. Then why would the second poster tell me I could? I'm going blind off people's advice here, I don't know anything about this stuff. You can laugh at me if you want, but of course I'm going to make mistakes, especially if I'm fed the wrong info.

What do I do -- do I wait until tomorrow and see if he's right, or try to remove it now? I DO know trying to remove it when still wet would create a bigger mess.

Last edited by confusedperson; 08-13-2021 at 10:27 PM.
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  #6  
08-13-2021, 10:29 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by confusedperson View Post
There are no instructions on the tube or the packaging for removing the stuff. From Post #2 I was led to believe I could just pull it off once it gets hard. Is that not the case?
https://www.permatex.com/products/ga...on_info_custom

It's not really made to be removed. But it's just silicon.

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  #7  
08-13-2021, 10:33 PM
confusedperson confusedperson is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lordsmurf View Post
https://www.permatex.com/products/ga...on_info_custom

It's not really made to be removed. But it's just silicon.
So...what does that mean? Does that mean it can't be removed once it dries? Do I take it off now or not? I'm not familiar with the properties of silicon.
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  #8  
08-13-2021, 10:37 PM
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It means it wasn't made to be removed. It's like a mild threadgripper (threadlocker). But it can be. It's just silicon. May leave residue, pain to remove, and yet less difficult than the pin stuck in a hold. Stronger than liquid latex.

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  #9  
08-13-2021, 11:20 PM
latreche34 latreche34 is offline
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I should have thought twice about your user name, I didn't expect you to squeeze half the tube in there, You should only cover the round plug. Now you may have to replace the S-Video socket, Don't blame me, I was just trying to help, Always read the package before using. Cancer? yes most if not all chemicals can cause cancer for long term exposure, you touched it for few minutes, come on.
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  #10  
08-14-2021, 12:19 AM
confusedperson confusedperson is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by latreche34 View Post
I should have thought twice about your user name, I didn't expect you to squeeze half the tube in there, You should only cover the round plug. Now you may have to replace the S-Video socket, Don't blame me, I was just trying to help, Always read the package before using. Cancer? yes most if not all chemicals can cause cancer for long term exposure, you touched it for few minutes, come on.
I can't replace the socket...I took a peek inside earlier and it's soldered to a circuit board. I wouldn't know how to begin from there.

Guess it's back to eBay for me.
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  #11  
08-14-2021, 12:30 AM
latreche34 latreche34 is offline
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Did you try to pull out that thing?
No remover, STOP using chemicals, you will destroy the plastics.
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  #12  
08-14-2021, 12:38 AM
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I don't understand the instant defeatist attitude. It's not a lost cause. And honestly, you're no worse off now than you were before covering it in pureed Smurf. Pull it off now, before it cures 100% hard as granite.

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  #13  
08-14-2021, 12:46 AM
confusedperson confusedperson is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by latreche34 View Post
Did you try to pull out that thing?
No remover, STOP using chemicals, you will destroy the plastics.
I just tried now. If I can't use chemicals there's no hope; it left a lot behind. The outlet is totally gummed up. How is it not a lost cause? I don't get it. I don't see how this can be overcome.

I would ask if Smurf is selling any models lately, but I probably just blacklisted myself.
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  #14  
08-14-2021, 12:57 AM
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- Yes, I have a few decks, PM me.
- You're not blacklisted.
- I'm just shaking my head in disbelief. But I've seen worse, refurb'd worse.

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  #15  
08-14-2021, 02:20 AM
confusedperson confusedperson is offline
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Out of curiosity, what would it actually take to repair what I just did? I don't see a way with my skill level; I'm assuming you'd have to replace the plug entirely and I already said it's soldered in.
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  #16  
08-14-2021, 03:00 AM
Hushpower Hushpower is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Latreche34
Use gasket maker, squeeze some into the face of the plug and let it dry overnight, Then pull out the blub of rubber, if you are lucky it will come out
Out of interest, have you actually done this successfully?
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  #17  
08-14-2021, 03:03 AM
Hushpower Hushpower is offline
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I'm just shaking my head in disbelief.
So am I, at the suggestion itself.
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  #18  
08-14-2021, 07:26 AM
themaster1 themaster1 is offline
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what about a magnet (a strong/big one) to pull it out the socket ?
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  #19  
08-14-2021, 10:11 AM
latreche34 latreche34 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hushpower View Post
Out of interest, have you actually done this successfully?
I was never stupid enough to break a pin inside a S-Video socket, but I'm familiar with silicon based rubber gasket maker, I've used it quite a bit in my life, and I know how it works, and no it doesn't harden to granite.


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Originally Posted by themaster1 View Post
what about a magnet (a strong/big one) to pull it out the socket ?
No, the pins are not made of iron, they don't stick to magnets.
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  #20  
08-14-2021, 08:32 PM
Hushpower Hushpower is offline
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Quote:
I was never stupid enough to break a pin inside a S-Video socket, but I'm familiar with silicon based rubber gasket maker, I've used it quite a bit in my life, and I know how it works, and no it doesn't harden to granite.
So, Yes or No?
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