By the way, on another extreme are mass-market magazines like EQ and
Mix and Electronic Musician who are vague about what tapes to bake
or outright advocate baking all "old" tapes. This is completely
wrong and a tape should only be baked or otherwise treated if it is
known defective. Richard Hess will clarify, but I am pretty sure
that the _vast_ majority of pre-1970 tapes hold up just fine over
time and indeed will be damaged by baking or other treatments
(apparently some early types suffer loss of lubricant, which is a
different problem). And, Scotch 206/207 back-coated tape never
suffered any problems according to both Del Eilers and Bill Lund
formerly of 3M. Furthermore, early Ampex black-oxide tape, the
non-back-coated types, seems OK, in fact I just recently transferred
two reels of I think 424 or 434 type from 1969.
The big problem with these mass-market mags is they over-simplify
(sometimes due to ignorant writers, sometimes due to an editorial
mandate to keep things to idiot-simple talking points). In a nuanced
and complex problem set like what confronts old tapes, this is
dangerous and ignorant.
My point is, the most important thing we can do with old tapes is to
suss out what type is actually in the box, first and before anything
action is taken. My experience is that many tapes arrive in white
boxes or generic boxes and often if there is a tape type label on
the box, what's in it is not that. And then we have mixed-type reels
which are their own special hell. Once we suss out exactly what's on
the reel, we can then be on the lookout for any problems associated
with that kind of tape.
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message ----- From: "Tom Fine" <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, April 03, 2008 6:26 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Fwd: Sticky AGFA PEM 469
Hi Parker:
Regarding this page:
http://www.recordist.com/ampex/docs/misc/sticky-shed.html
I think Ampex tape was sticky past the mid-80's, despite some Ampex
claims. As I understand it, 406/407/456 was likely to go sticky
into the early 90's. Some say ALL of these tapes will eventually go
sticky. I have 456 and 406 and 457 from the late 90s and early this
decade and so far no problems with sticky. But, it's early ...
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message ----- From: "Parker Dinkins"
<parker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, April 02, 2008 10:07 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Fwd: Sticky AGFA PEM 469
on 4/2/08 8:49 PM US/Central, Steven Smolian at smolians@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
There is (was?) a 3M site that lists all the tape product numbers and
indicates their liklihood of getting the dreaded shed. Del Eilers put the
list together before he moved elsewhere withing the company.
Maybe this is list you are referring to -
http://www.recordist.com/ampex/docs/misc/sticky-shed.html
While Del Eilers' list of 3M tape products can be found here -
http://www.recordist.com/ampex/docs/aorprod2.html
--
Parker Dinkins
MasterDigital Corporation
Audio Restoration + CD Mastering
http://masterdigital.com