Reviving a 20+ year old mini-DV camcorder

camcorder revival

This Canon mini-DV camcorder was bought new, sometime around 2002 / 2003. Even then however, the writing was on the wall for tape-based video recording. Mobile “feature” phones of the time were already starting to have better and better cameras, and the price of USB sticks and memory cards were falling rapidly while increasing in capacity.

In 2005, the camcorder was connected to a PC via its FireWire socket. Many of the video clips were pulled over onto the PC. In the transfer process however, the metadata from the clips including the timestamps were not copied. It’s impossible to tell today when the clips were taken. So the plan was to fire up the camcorder and see if the clips could be copied again, or even the date stamps transcribed manually.

First and most obvious thing was that the battery was stone dead. Popping the battery case open, there were two lithium cells in series and both were absolutely dead….. zero volts. We replaced the two cells with two 18650’s, but the battery pack output was still zero. A little trick we’ve learned, and one that we put to use several times at our repair cafe this week, was to charge the pack briefly which seems to wake up the onboard BMS. After doing this, the pack was now outputting almost 8 volts.

Now the next hurdle. Would the thing actually switch on and work? 20 years is a long time for electrolytic capacitors, and rubber belts and drive wheels turn to a sticky goo over time.

Snapping the battery into place and switching on, amazingly the thing came to life! The pop-out video screen was alive, but the look-through viewfinder seemed to be dead. Next test was to see would it accept a tape. It did, and the tape threaded up okay. Pressed play and the thing worked! You can see the timestamps on the clips from 2004!

If you have any mini-DV tapes that you want to check, or you like tinkering with this kind of stuff, come and see us in the space any Monday or Tuesday evening. There’s always something interesting going on.

TOG Repair Café at DCU’s Climate Action Fair (Green Week 2026)

We’re heading to DCU Green Week as part of the Climate Action Fair — and we’re bringing a mini TOG Repair Café setup with us. Come say hello, meet loads of other brilliant groups on the day, and if you’ve something small that’s broken, bring it along and we’ll do our best to help you get it working again.

Repair Café details

  • When: Wednesday 4 March 2026, 11:00–14:00
  • Where: Ground Floor, U Building (GLA), bottom of the steps
  • What to bring:broken tech and trinkets” (small, carry-in items work best)
  • Cost: Free to drop by (it’s part of the fair)

What is a Repair Café?

It’s a friendly, drop-in repair meetup: you bring the item, we bring the tools and volunteer know-how, and we’ll troubleshoot it together. Even when something can’t be fixed on the spot, you’ll usually leave with a better idea of what’s going on (and what to try next).

More info

DCU have the full Green Week / Climate Action Fair listing here:
https://www.dcu.ie/sustainability/campaigns

Adult Learners’ Festival 2026 at TOG: Spring Into Learning (Tuesday 3 March)

For Adult Learners’ Festival 2026 (2–6 March), TOG is turning our normal Tuesday Open Night on 3rd March into a festival-friendly, drop-in evening as part of #SpringIntoLearning #ALF26.

When

Tuesday 3rd March, 7:00 pm – 9:30 pm
Free, no booking required — just drop in.

What’s happening?

A relaxed, welcoming intro to the hackerspace:

  • Pop in for a tour and a chat
  • See what members are building, fixing, or learning
  • Bring a question or a small project and we’ll help you figure out next steps

TOG as informal adult education

TOG is a great place for learning by doing. Across our group nights and workshops, you’ll find people picking up practical skills like:

  • Electronics (soldering, debugging, sensors)
  • Making and fabrication (3D printing, laser cutting, prototyping)
  • Repair and reuse (fixing everyday items, sharing tools and know-how)
  • Radio and comms projects (antennas, digital modes, getting started)

More festival events

See what else is on during the festival: https://www.adultlearnersfestival.ie/events/

Come along on Tuesday 3rd March and Spring Into Learning with us.

Repair Cafe for Trinity’s Green Week!

We’re teaming up with Unit 18 (Trinity in the Community) to run a special Repair Café as part of Trinity’s Green Week. It’s a smaller Repair Café than our usual big TOG events, but it’ll still have all the best bits: friendly fixers, practical repairs, and plenty of good chats.

Got something broken? Bring along your small household items, small furniture, or electrical bits that have stopped working, and we’ll do our best to help you repair them while you wait. Expect a bit of hands-on problem solving, a cup of tea, and a nice lunchtime vibe.

When: Friday, 13 March 202612:30–2:30pm
Where: Unit 18, Trinity in the Community (Trinity College Dublin)
Cost: Free / all welcome
Tickets: Booking required — very limited places

👉 Full details + booking link:

https://www.tcd.ie/sustainability/event/?trumbaEmbed=eventid%3D197629508%26seotitle%3DGreen-Week-Repair-Caf%26view%3Devent%26-childview%3D%26returnUrl%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fwww.tcd.ie%252Fsustainability%252Fevents-listing%252F

DMR Demonstration Evening

If you’ve been DMR-curious for a while (or you’ve a radio sitting there with a half-finished codeplug), this is a great chance to see a full setup done properly, step-by-step.

On Tuesday, 24th March 2026, South Dublin Radio Club, in collaboration with TOG Hackerspace, will host a DMR Demonstration Evening at the club in Rathfarnham.

What’s happening on the night

Jeffrey Roe (EI7IRB) will give a practical demonstration covering:

  • Setting up a DMR hotspot
  • Creating and programming a codeplug
  • Tips and lessons learned during setup (the bits that aren’t obvious until you’ve tried it)

This session will suit:

  • Anyone new to DMR who wants the “what talks to what?” overview
  • Anyone with an existing setup who wants to tidy it up, improve it, or avoid common pitfalls

Want to contribute?

Members who’d like to give a short demo or presentation on other parts of DMR are very welcome to get involved — different radios, different workflows, different approaches all help.

Event details

  • Date: Tuesday, 24th March 2026
  • Free: No Booking Required,
  • Time: 19:30 – 21:30
  • Venue: South Dublin Radio Club, Ballyroan Community Centre, Rathfarnham, Dublin 14

We’re looking forward to a good evening of radio chat, practical demos, and plenty of Q&A. See you there!

New power tools added to “Repair Café in a Box”

We’re delighted to share an upgrade to our Repair Café in a Box programme: we’ve added a range of power tools to the equipment kit that community groups can borrow to help run repair events.

This work is funded by the Community Climate Action Programme (Round 1) under the Government’s Climate Action Fund. It builds on our 2024 funding and helps us expand what we can offer through our Repair Café rental programme, making it easier for more groups across the Dublin region to host repairs safely and confidently.

What’s included?

Alongside the usual Repair Café essentials, we now have a suite of power tools and related kit available to loan. The goal is simple: help fix more things, reduce waste, and keep useful items in service for longer.

Borrow the kit for your Repair Café (free)

Since 2024, this programme has supported Repair Cafés and community events all over the place — including plenty hosted by ourselves at TOG. If you’re organising a Repair Café (or planning one) and you’d like to borrow the equipment at no cost, just get in touch and we’ll help you figure out what you need.

Thanks

This project is made possible with support from Dublin City Council, in partnership with the Department of Environment, Climate and Communications.

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