Hi Richard:
Please site your source for the Ampex 600 series story. Thanks.
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message ----- From: "Charles A. Richardson" <charlesarichardson@xxxxxxxxxxx
>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, April 07, 2008 8:06 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Fwd: Sticky AGFA PEM 469
Dear David:
Regarding the EPA, Whale oil, etc.  In 1970 the EPA was created by   Congress.  In 1972 the 
Marine Mammal Protection Act banned hunting  of  whales and this was supplemented in 1982 when 
the UN also  passed an  international whale hunting ban as whales were in danger  of 
extinction.  Whale oil is a good mechanical lubricant and is  used in  oiling precision 
mechanisms such as watches and clocks,  but it was  never used as a binder lubricant in tape 
manufacture.   Chemical  Engineering has synthesized whale oil so as to reduce the  demand for 
natural whale oil.  There may be an after market  lubricant based on  either natural or 
synthetic whale oil which  some use in attempting to  "re-lubricate" a tape that has squealing 
problems.  It is a very  limited band aide short term remedy which  is not approved by chemists 
as safe.
In 1976 the Toxic Substances Act banned the use of Polychlorinated   Biphenyl chemicals or 
PCB's.  PCBs were used as a liquid coolant in  big
AC power transformers used by the electric utility companies.   PCBs  were used in transformers, 
some motors, and some capacitors.   PCBs  were never used in tape manufacture.  There was a 
major  environmental  disaster in the 1970s when companies dumped large  quantities of PCBs 
into the Hudson River and the James River,  creating a poisoned water  environment that will 
take centuries to  remedy.  Chlorine, and most of  its compounds are dangerous  poisons, thus 
they are banned unless one  gets a waiver and/or an  EPA license which can only be had by 
instituting
strict material use and disposal controls that met EPA chemical  safety  standards.
PVC, Polyvinyl Chloride, was used in Europe for some time by BASF  and  AGFA in the manufacture 
of their base films.  Ampex used a PVC  binder,  but only in their 600 series of tapes.  There 
is a major  chemical  problem with PVC.  Any loose radical Chlorine atoms can  readily  combine 
with moisture to form Hydrochloric Acid, or HCL.   When this  happens, the HCL will attack the 
head core materials and  the tape head  gaps, which drastically shortens head life and  causes 
major problems  in the head gap area.  So for both  environmental problems of handling 
Chlorine, and its bad habit of  generating HCL and eating tape heads,  PVC was dropped from tape 
manufacture, decades ago, with the exception  of its continued use  for decades in the Ampex 600 
series tape binder  chemistry.
The seeds of the disaster that have lead to Sticky Shed Syndrome  arise  in tape maker chemical 
changes of the 1970s, is an important  and  interesting story.  I do not believe that the 
government had  anything  to do with these tape chemical changes.  They were done  by tape 
makers  for various reasons unrelated to government  regulation.
Hope this helps.
Charles Richardson
On Apr 5, 2008, at 6:25 PM, David Lennick wrote:
I will stand corrected if that's the case, but that was what I  heard  at the time.
dl
Tom Fine wrote:
Hi David:
Are you sure the whale oil story is true. I was told it is   mythology and that the real story 
is that certain solvents  couldn't  be used in the manufacturing process anymore.
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message ----- From: "David Lennick" <dlennick@xxxxxxxxxxxx >
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, April 05, 2008 12:04 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Fwd: Sticky AGFA PEM 469
"Environmental law changes forced most tape manufactures to  change  the
formula of their binder in the early 70's."
Read: They used to use whale oil, then they went to synthetic.