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Re: [ARSCLIST] NASA



Hi Bob:

According to the articles I've seen, NASA passed these tapes on to the National Archives. In the late 70s, for some reason not made clear in the articles, the National Archives passed them back to NASA. They have since been lost by NASA. Agreed that the MO you described would be preferable but apparently that's not what happened here. Richard Hess, who I believe is on vacation, knows more about the details of this because he is somewhat expert on instrumentation formats. But I'll take a stab. I think the video was high-resolution, slow-scan as it was transmitted and recorded. In other words, an hour-long spacewalk might take all night to transmit and record. Apparently, this format was re-modulated to NTSC to feed the networks. Now what I'm not clear on, was there a simultaneous low-quality feed coming live from the moon? I always thought the moon walk was broadcast live, at least those grainy videos, but I was only 3 years old then (although I do remember all of us crowded around the TV watching the spacemen). Actually, the unfortunate fate of these tapes PROVES that the MO you described is best followed.

-- Tom Fine

PS -- I just read another article that NASA is now looking to re-acquire all manner of parts of the Apollo craft from various space museums so they can copy the parts for use on their "next generation" lunar craft. Wow, what's old is new. Next they'll want to switch to disk-cutters for their cap-com logger! ;)

----- Original Message ----- From: "Robert Hodge" <rjhodge@xxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, August 15, 2006 4:50 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] NASA



Hi Tom,

I realise the NTSC tapes weren't being addressed, it just seems to me
that ANY magnetic tape or sound recording- especiailly when realtive to
the history of the U. S. and especially when supported by taxpayers
dollars - should be held at the LOC. Even if they themselves can't play
them, then at least they would stand a better chance of being preserved
and their whereabouts known..
At least that is my experience with L.O.C. Motion  Picture Dept.

Bob

tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 8/15/2006 4:31 PM >>>
Hi Bob:

The issue is that NASA recorded the video in a proprietary format and
fed a converted, lower-quality
NTSC video signal to the networks. The instrumentation tapes contain
the high-quality video stream.
Those tapes are lost. Richard Hess posted a link to a very detailed
report about this a couple weeks
ago. Search back and you'll find much more accurate details than were
in the dumbed-down mainstream
media stories. There was a link to a PDF about the search so far. Those
tapes definitely appear
lost.

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- From: "Robert Hodge" <rjhodge@xxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, August 15, 2006 4:18 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] RCA Metal Parts in Camden.



I lost the link about the lost NASA tape, but has anyone at NASA considered asking the Library Of Congress Motion Picture and Sound division for the videotape ? They should have it if anyone should.

Bob Hodge

loujudson@xxxxxxx 8/15/2006 2:49 PM >>>
a trivial part of me would love to know who the 'let and what the film
were... to file in the useless but interesting part of the brain,
though that part is too large already! Wonder what her internal drama
was on that night! Got jilted, hated her filmed self, who knows
what...

<L>

Lou Judson * Intuitive Audio
415-883-2689

On Aug 15, 2006, at 10:43 AM, Robert Hodge wrote:

A True Story Of Similar Tone...

A film starlet whose name escapes me presently had borrowed a 35 mm
nitrate print of one of her films from the studio  to show at one of
her
parties and when she was through with it, threw the whole print in
the
ocean..

That print was the only surviving print left of that title.

Amazing.....

R.Hodge


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