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[ARSCLIST] using lacquers
From: Patent Tactics, George Brock-Nannestad
Hello,
the two short video features on lacquer manufacture, record cutting, and
galvanic processing/pressing are very instructive and honest.
In the first, we can understand why a lacquer is so expensive: it is slow to
manufacture and the reject rate is 50%. I use TRANSCO myself. There used to
be talks about "spring" and "autumn" lacquers, the first being quieter. This
has to do with temperature and humidity during the drying by evaporation that
we see. Many different methods of depositing the nitro-cellulose lacquer have
been tried, and no doubt at some stage controlled-atmosphere drying could
have been introduced. Working dust-free would also have prevented the
rejects. However, the whole technology was superceded by error-correction
codes making dust specks irrelevant in the digital domain.
In the processing we see something very interesting: they are preparing an
original metal negative, a "father", but they call it a stamper and use it as
a stamper. This is something you would only do for small runs (I suppose most
modern vinyl record production is small run), otherwise you would go the
whole process of making a metal positive, "mother", and only from that make
the stamper, the "son". Here, you would have to go back and cut another
lacquer if you needed to exceed the print run of the first stamper; the
matrix number scribing would be different, and so you would easily be able to
distinguish between print runs.
I have a small story from real life to end this comment with:
you know that I have made a fair bit of research into the physical marks on
78s that have a discographical bearing. For instance, in Europe we have been
blessed with a lot of original scribed under-label information from Victor
(acoustic and electrical) on the Gramophone Company (and later some
Electrola) pressings, because the presses were different, and the whole metal
surface was more or less used right through to pressing.
Now, I have in front of me a Danish shellac pressing, early-to-mid 1950s,
Pathé PT1005; one side being "Liebeslied (Valse)" (Kreisler-Arrang. A.
Bernard), Armand Bernard et son orchestre á cordes, matrix no.CPT 9407-21.
Under the label it says "Made in France" in elevated reversed, which means it
was stamped into a negative. Near the centre is the familiar AUDIODISC logo
(which means they were not using PYRAL), but there are no holes for a drive
pin. However, on the same circle as AUDIODISC it says: USE OTHER SIDE.
Tableau!! There may be many reasons why they disobeyed this advice, but
imagine that they advertise the fact! Possibly they had had to reject the
"good" side and lacquers were - as always - expensive.
Kind regards,
George
Kind regards,
George