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I suggest to ,, on the internet look for sewing machine shops in your town in australia, & even look in the phone book in the yellow pages do you have a hancock fabric in your area? they have sewing machines & sergers
Similar problem, solved when dirty contacts were cleaned, look for some corrosion on either the battery pack or in the radio battery holder. Use very fine grit sand paper.
also check to see if a tab on the battery holder contact is bent inward (radio dropped perhaps)
Unfortunately, the battery pack as a unit has been discontinued, but the battery itself (part #243213-00) can be purchased online. Amazon sells it for $35.99. You can find it here:
Rechargeable batteries can only be recharged so many times. They begin to slowly lose their capacity after about the first 5 charges until ultimately it won't hold a charge anymore. It appears that this is your problem. Look for a model number on the battery & do a Google search for it if you want to try & replace it. You might also find it is cheaper to buy a whole new DVD player than it is to buy a replacement battery.
It may or may not be a battery problem. A completely dead battery will not turn the green, red and blue lights on at all, like my bloated and dead original battery. This camera uses a custom lithium-polymer battery that built just for this camera. I don't think you can order one from Che-ez. But if you are savvy enough, you can re-build the battery by taking the old battery pack and the protection circuit board out with a soldering iron, keeping the plastic frame and replace the pack with a similar one that you can buy on ebay for less than US$10 by soldering it back on to the contacts on the frame. Just search "Lithium Polymer 380mAh" on ebay and that is the one that gave mine a second life. WARNING: Do it at your own risk, don't hold me liable if you lose a finger or more from mishandling the potentially explosive Li-ion battery pack. Good luck!
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