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Re: [ARSCLIST] Risk assessment tool



Richard's answer to #1, I have encountered this and it is absolutely incurable. Some SSS tapes that are stored under particularly terrible conditions actually fuse together and baking does nothing but make them peel apart the wrong way. I've done a lot of experimenting on this kind of SSS tapes because I was lucky enough to find a box of useless Ampex 406 hubs in that condition (useless in that there was no valuable content on them -- they were end-of-rolls from a long-closed recording studio) -- store for 20+ years in an attic that varied from below freezing to 100+ degrees and dry to very high humidity. I experimented with longer and shorter baking times and even emersion in distilled water to try and loosen them up before baking. No dice. If the backing fuses to the oxide behind it, it's done. I supposed there are chemical treatments for super-valuable content, but just how much content are we talking about that the owner would go to those lengths or pay that money (my bet -- less than 1% of all tapes in that condition). By the way, Scotch 206 tapes stored in the same attic play perfectly well to this day.

So, my bottom line is that if I had something I did not want to lose on a sticky-shed tape, I'd bake and transfer sooner rather than later and I'd put a transfer effort in appropriate to the MO that I might never be able to play that tape again.

As for curled old brown tapes, they seem to have a stasis point and my concern is more treating them as carefully as a brittle tape needs to be treated. The curling is not really an issue since there are many known methods to push tape against heads on certain tape decks. Cassettes with ancient deteriorated shells can be transplanted.

The two worst conditions I can think of for analog tape are: 1) sticky-shed where the backing has fused to the oxide behind it and 2) curled tapes so dried out that the oxide falls off -- hopefully after they've scraped against the play head and a transfer has been made.

Another hazard of the trade is bad splices, but there are many cures for that.

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- From: "Richard Warren" <richard.warren@xxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2006 1:09 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Risk assessment tool



At 09:20 AM 1/3/2006, you wrote:
Hi,

I am further developing a risk assessment tool for ranking field audio
collections by their preservation condition and level of risk they
carry. The tool is called FACET and was presented first at the ARSC
pre-conference workshop last year. I have formulated a few
format-related questions, with help from Richard Hess and Steve Smolian,
and hope to draw upon the collective expertise assembled here. The first
set of questions concern sticky shed syndrome tapes:

1. Given that there is a known, easy cure for sticky shed (baking) that
is nearly always successful, how concerned are you about tapes with this

I'm concerned because on some tapes with sss, the sticky backing can peel the recorded layer from the base and ruin the recording.


condition?

2. Is there any evidence that sss tapes actively continue to deteriorate
over time in such a way as to compromise future transfer?

Please see comment above (but I don't know if time is a factor or the type of backing).



3. If you had to choose between preservation transfer of an sss tape or
a curling acetate-based tape or an audio cassette from the 1970s, which
would you choose and why?

That would depend on content. If both had the same content, I'd try the sss tape first because, if it played, the results would likely be better.



Many thanks!

Mike

----------
Mike Casey
Associate Director for Recording Services
Archives of Traditional Music
Indiana University

(812) 855-8090

Co-chair, ARSC Technical Committee



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