I agree with Richard. If the pancakes are held tightly top and bottom within their tape boxes, and
then the pile of tape boxes is held tightly together within one larger box, and that box is nested
in a sea of packing material in a still larger box, and you insure it for full replacement value,
you should be able to rest easy. Note that winter weather is gripping the central and eastern part
of the country, so if these are tapes which should not sit in well-below-zero depots and trucks,
ship them faster-to-destination. It was -2 degrees outside when I got up just before sunrise today.
15 degrees when I left for work a couple hours later. Yesterday was colder still. Midwest and New
England have it colder than here.
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message -----
From: "Richard L. Hess" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, February 06, 2007 5:26 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Transporting 10 inch pancakes
Hi, Jerry,
It depends. MOST (but not all) boxes with
pancakes had inserts that took up the space of
the flanges within the box forming a safe, tight
pack. Other times, panckes came on plastic trays
that nestled in a 10- or 12-pack. Either of these
methods are fine to ship pancakes.
If you're talking one or two, certainly screw
flanges on, but if you're talking 50-100, and
they are packed as originally sold, the damage of
handling the tape is, in my opinion, greater than
the risk from moving damage. I would tape each
box closed after inspecting that the pancake is
tight. Then I'd pack the whole thing in a tight
carton. If these are extra-valuable AND you're
shipping by common carrier, I would wrap that in
single-sided corrugated wrapping and tightly
stuff it inside a larger box. The goal here is to
prevent crushing that would spring an individual
box open and crush the pancake.
Empty reels are selling for $30 these days,
although flanges may still be cheaper, but you
also have to get the hardware. The nuts with the
screw-like tapered heads on them are called "sex
nuts" believe it or not. I think US Recording Media has the pieces.
Cheers,
Richard
At 04:59 PM 2007-02-06, Jerry McBride wrote:
>Does anyone have experience with moving a collection of quarter-inch tapes, as ten-inch pancakes in
>their original boxes? It seems logical to assume that it would be safer to ship or move tape on
>reels. How great is the danger that the pancake will come unwound under normal shipping and moving
>conditions if stored on hubs in the original boxes?
>
>--
>Jerry McBride, Head Librarian
>Music Library and Archive of Recorded Sound
>Braun Music Center, Room 104
>Stanford University
>541 Lasuén Mall
>Stanford, CA 94305-3076
>
>[log in to unmask]
>650-725-1146
>650-725-1145 (fax)
>
Richard L. Hess email: [log in to unmask]
Aurora, Ontario, Canada (905) 713 6733 1-877-TAPE-FIX
Detailed contact information: http://www.richardhess.com/tape/contact.htm
Quality tape transfers -- even from hard-to-play tapes.
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