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Re: [ARSCLIST] looking for advice on cylinders



Susan Stinson wrote:
Hello, Tom:
Actually, no, they don't.  As we are experiencing in the development of
our cylinder laser playback system, the laser beam picks up whatever the
groove modulation has to offer, including particles of dust, wax, and
malformations caused by mould activity.  It seems, reasonably, that once
the mould has arrived and done its _thing_, there is no fix.

With the advantage of perfect ignorance, I suggest that you may be too pessimistic. The day may come when sophistication in the use of the laser will pay off. On the simplest level, scanning with two lasers at different frequencies will allow differentiation in a remote-sensing effect: the mold will have different transmission and reflectance properties in the two (or more) colors and that may be exploited. More sophisticated techniques, even tomography, may become possible in which the mold would become transparent to the pickup. Certainly, the cost would be high, but it might not remain so and it may be worthwhile.


Some years ago, a friend was hoping to recover audio quality from an optical track on old film. (He was with Warner at the time, is now with Microsoft.) We investigated and had some success with gray-scale pickup and algorithms for inferring the shape of the waveform and correction to the two (symmetric) profiles - one on each side - which gave the highest-probability reconstruction of the original. Our tools were simplistic and the results were preliminary, but they certainly went far beyond the de-facto thresholding of conventional sensors.

Mike
--
mrichter@xxxxxxx
http://www.mrichter.com/


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