Tom (and all),
Apologies if my response seemed harsh, i certainly wasn't  directing  anything
at you personally..
I do however think it's important for us to keep in mind the fact   that a good
percentage of the readers on this list are not engineers but  rather  representatives of 
collecting
bodies (institutional or otherwise) trying to get a grip on how  to  manage their holdings.
With that in mind, and given our well-intentioned propensity to  look  at problems
from as many angles as possible, i fear that sometimes we have  the  tendency to dive
head-first into worst-case scenarios rather than looking at  David's  original post as a more
general problem.
To be sure, I haven't disagreed with anything you've offered to  this  discussion.
It is important to me, though, that we make this forum as helpful  as  possible to those without
the resources to, say, establish tape playback capabilities within  a  cold storage environment.
And that's all i'm going to say on that matter.
Four posts in 24hrs is way over my limit. (hint hint..)
cheers,
Brandon Burke
On Oct 9, 2006, at 3:08 PM, Tom Fine wrote:
Hi Brandon:
Who's talking about "delegitimizing" anything? That's what's   bananas! Do whatever you want 
with your tapes, everyone, please.   Hopefully they will play well and true and not be ruined 
with  whatever processes you decide to employ. I'm just speaking as   someone who has quite a 
bit of experience with problem tapes and   I'm saying wait for advice from someone who I would 
consider  expert  in problem tapes. Anyone can do whatever they want, it's  your  tapes. 
Hopefully they won't get ruined (and if they do get  ruined,  hopefully they're not the tapes 
that contain that secret  section of  the Nixon tapes).
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message ----- From: "Brandon Burke"   <burke@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, October 09, 2006 4:44 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Tape baking question
Some good (and certainly responsible) points here, but I feel
compelled to say that i'm uncomfortable with the idea that there
exists somewhere a *true* sticky shed, and that only tapes  "bound   together
until treated" qualify. This not only delegitimizes anything  less  than
over-the-top obvious hydrolysis, it also implies that (1)   absolutely any
and every reel of poly tape, provided it contains at least one   splice,
should be frozen before playback just in case the inner splice  is  sticky
and (2) we all have the option of freezing reels and playing  them  back
in a refrigerator.
That's bananas..
Brandon Burke
On Oct 9, 2006, at 3:32 AM, Tom Fine wrote:
Hi Brandon:
The problem is, there could well be parts of the tape pack  that  are  stuck together 
(pinning and I forgot the other word  Richard  uses).  So unrolling those parts before they 
are  treated will  destroy them  (peel the oxide off). I asked  Richard about this  very type 
of reel  before and if I recall  the answer is freeze it  and then play it  cold (ie tape 
machine in a fridge) at very slow  speed, which should  unstick  the bound portions enough to 
spool  onto a reel for baking.   The other parts, like 176, don't respond  to baking and need 
the  full cold treatment, if I recall. It's  much more  complicated that  just spooling 
pieces off because true sticky- shed tape is probably  bound together until treated and  thus 
will be destroyed by spooling  until it's treated.
Don't take what I say is gospel truth. Let Richard weigh in   since  he's done the research.
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message ----- From: "Brandon Burke"    <burke@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, October 09, 2006 1:52 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Tape baking question
First of all, i mean not to steal
Richard H's thunder, as he knows quite
a bit more about this subject than me.
That said, it strikes me that the solution
proposed here only accounts for splices
*so* sticky as to be identifiable by touch alone.
Thus allowing selections exhibiting less
ridiculously obvious stages of hyrolysis
to miss the boat.
Brandon Burke
Quoting Tom Fine <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
Guys, this is not all correct. Wait for Richard Hess to chime  in.
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Lennick" <dlennick@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, October 08, 2006 10:38 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Tape baking question
> That was sort of what I expected the answer to be.
>
> dl
>
> "joe@xxxxxxxxxxx" wrote:
>
>> If memory serves, baking is known to be detrimental to some
types of
>> tape, so I'd suggest separating them out as best you can,
bake,
>> reassemble and Xfer.
>>
>> Joe Salerno
>> Industrial Video Services
>> PO Box 273405
>> Houston Texas 77277-3405
>>
>> David Lennick wrote:
>> > Here's one for the team. Let's say you have a reel made
up of
several short
>> > pieces of tape, either a compilation or a master or just
something
where it was
>> > convenient to group similar pieces of material together.
Let's say
SOME of the
>> > selections are recorded on 176, some on 456, some on god
knows
what....and of
>> > course, now you have a tape that has sticky shed on only
some of the
tracks. Do
>> > you bake the whole thing or try and remove only the
portions
that
need
>> > treatment and bake them?
>> >
>> > --Stuck
>> >
--
Brandon Burke
Archivist for Audio Collections
Hoover Institution Archives
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-6010
vox: 650.724.9711
fax: 650.725.3445
email: burke@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
____________________________________
Brandon Burke
Archivist for Audio Collections
Hoover Institution Archives
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-6010
vox: 650.724.9711
fax: 650.725.3445
email: burke@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
____________________________________
Brandon Burke
Archivist for Audio Collections
Hoover Institution Archives
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-6010
vox: 650.724.9711
fax: 650.725.3445
email: burke@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx