Guys, I think all of that type of black oxide / no-backcoat tape can
develope this problem but it doesn't seem to be a sure thing that the
problem will develop. I've had it in small does (ie clay-like residue
on the heads and guides, but not enough to hamper playback or cause
squealing -- more like "skid marks" on some surfaces sometimes) from
early 60's Scotch 202 also.
Question that comes to mind is, did the black oxide require a different
binder or could there be something different in the oxide mix that
reacts with "traditional" binder to cause this problem sometimes?
I, too, have used dozens of reels of 175 and not had problems.
And, adding yet another depressing layer to this whole thing, Scotch
206 and 208 are supposed to "never" develop sticky-shed. Well, I've had
one reel of each do it. Both were stored for long periods in damp
enough conditions that the boxes were moldy. It's only been those two
reels and otherwise, I have 30-year-old reels of Scotch 206 that still
play back at their original levels, making them as hearty as old
AudioTape.
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message ----- From: "David Lennick" <dlennick@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, October 10, 2006 10:03 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Tape baking question
I have never had a problem with 175 and I've run hundreds of reels
of the stuff.
On the other hand, a reel of *275* (looks identical) that came from
ORTF in the
mid 70s jammed up a Studer at CBC Edmonton for a day and a half in
about 1983. As
far as I can recall, that's the only defective reel I've known of
that stuff as
well.
(Where do I find a fridge that will hold a Teac A3300SX-2T?)
dl
"Richard L. Hess" wrote:
Hi, David,
I invented the cold-playing process--put the player in the fridge
along with the tape...I presented that Sunday at the AES in San
Francisco.
Tapes that do not respond to baking and still squeal such as Sony
PR-150 and 3M 175 do respond to being played below their current glass
transition temperature (Tg). The binder degradation has lowered the Tg
to below room temperature.
Cold-desiccation, as I understand Peter's process, is different. I
don't think he plays the tape cold.
It seems we're all incoherent. I'm in western Nebraska on my way back
from SF. Tomorrow I pick up yet another tape recorder in Des Moines.
Cheers,
Richard
Quoting David Lennick <dlennick@xxxxxxxxxxxx>:
Lists wrote:
David:
I invented the cold-desiccation process and, while it is very helpful in
many circumstances, it is time consuming and not, always, the best
alternative. If you simply have "sticky-shed" (binder
hydrolysis), it may
not be necessary. If you have inter-wrap adhesion or binder-base
adhesion
problems, then it can be a necessity.
This is something I want to know about..it appears that non
back-coated Shamrock
needs this process, which explains why some tapes I loaned the CBC a
few years
ago didn't respond to baking.
Hey..Shamrock cost $1.29 for an 1800-foot reel in the seventies and we all
bought the stuff!
dl