A few last comments based on these and Richards follow up. I 
firmly think that tapes in fact DO need individual treatment - but one CAN 
design a system that will allow that process to be done and still process a 
large quantity of materials with very high quality control. That is what VidiPax 
is all about. I do reiterate that Pelon is ONE treatment technique that we use, 
there are others. I am sort of surprised that people are reacting like this is a 
"new" idea here.  Sorry but it isn't. Pelon has been used in tape 
manufacture for this purpose for a LONG time. Some commercial tape  
cleaners Like the Elicon and the machines still made by RTI all use Pelon wiper 
systems. WE have used it for almost 10 years now and we have processed Hundreds 
of thousands of tapes (at some point you sort of stop counting - you know - 
billions of burgers sold at micky D's...
Now exactly HOW you use the 
material, the way you move the tape, the contact, tension and a bunch more 
variables are VERY important -
So the secret is in the sauce - it took me 
2 years to figure it out when I started the company!
Richards comments 
about RF. I was talking about audio and video - and indeed I think of RF as 
signal strength - which in a carrier based system is what it is - I did not want 
to go into too many details - but I WAS referring to audio as well.  At 
some point I can go into the magnetics of all this. But for the moment consider 
a few things. There are many different aspects in tape construction that will 
effect the signal output as well as the signal to noise ratio. In this specific 
case we are going to concentrate on S/N and what impact (if any) is there in 
removing lose surface particulate. First consider that the particles that we are 
removing are not necessarily magnetized as part of the recording in the first 
place. Not all particles orient themselves. These "background" particles are a 
significant proportion of the particles on the tape. Also consider the 
coercivity/retentivity hysterisis curves and think that these particles may not 
necessarily be the ones that were oriented correctly in the first place. They 
are not necessarily the nicely elongated particles, nor are they necessarily the 
ones with high energy orientation. Consider the track width relative to these 
particles - their more or less random distribution along the tape (meaning that 
there is not necessarily more particles removed over a LOUD section of a 
recording as opposed to a quiet section). And so forth. Also consider the impact 
of a lose particle in the WRONG place - which is quite possible too - which will 
actually reduce signal to noise. And consider the absence of magnetized 
particles is no noise but silence. Stir this around in your mind - and where I 
think you will come out is that removing the particulate is far better then 
leaving it.
One final note. In the rare cases where we do bake..... yes - 
we do clean with Pelon after as well. While baking may make tapes less sticky - 
it does not deal with particulate contamination and it still is an issue even if 
a tape IS baked.
And finally for those magnetic geeks in the audience - 
the proper explanation that I did not want to get into of the above 
is....
C. Mee and E. Daniel, Magnetic Recording, Volume III, McGraw Hill, 
1988, pp 155-170.
And amazingly some of it is on the web at:
http://www.ee.washington.edu/conselec/CE/kuhn/magtape/95x1.htm
which 
is an excellent article - specifically consider:
Noise 
sources[18] 
Bulk-erase noise: There is a noise source due to the size and orientation of the particles in the magnetic coating. The signal to noise ratio for a band of wavenumbers from k to dk (k = 2/) is given by:
Thus, the signal to noise is proportional to the track width (w), the volume fraction of the coating occupied by particles (p such that the maximum = 1) and the orientation (F(theta) = 3/8 for random and 1 for perfect). The signal to noise ratio is inversely proportional to the mean size of the particle (s) and the standard deviation of the particle size distribution sigma. Therefore, decreasing the track size, increasing the number of particles, and decreasing the particle size; will improve the bulk signal to noise.
In our specific case we are decreasing the 
number the particles by a VERY small amount in porportion to the volume in the 
coating. Since the particle size distribution is the same in aggregate - the 
impact of what we do is essentially nothing from a signal to noise ratio 
perspective - and in actual field experience it actually seems to improve s/n 
because of improvement of head performance which is a VERY important factor. The 
gap remains clean, s/n is better - output is better for low and high energy 
signal strength..... you get the idea.
James Lindner
General Manager VidiPax Division
VidiPax 
- The Magnetic Media Restoration Company
Executive 
Vice-President
Loudeye Technologies
NASDAQ 
Symbol:LOUD
VidiPax
450 West 31 Street
New York, N.Y.  
10001
212-563-1999 ext. 102
www.vidipax.com
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