Hello and a Happy New Year all
Very interesting thread and great reading and information from Peter @
SpecBros. Richard, I've never tried water either.
I hope to be at the JTS conference in Singapore in March this year.
We have been making great strides here with our mass digitisation in the
sound archive and some of us have made mini docos about our work! Watch
that space....!
Cheers
Marie
On Fri, Jan 22, 2016 at 11:05 AM, Richard L. Hess <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:
> As I think you know, I've published on my web page Marie O'Connell's
> alcohol process (with her permission, of course). I've not tried water, but
> I'm not laughing.
>
> So far, the best chemical I've found is D5 for this. It's slippery,
> doesn't evaporate too fast, but does eventually, seems inert.
>
> Seems safe since it's widely used in personal care products.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Richard
>
>
>
> On 1/21/2016 3:36 PM, lists wrote:
>
>> Richard:
>>
>> As we discussed off-list before, I haven't tried your procedure for
>> running tapes at cold temperatures to bring some of the material below the
>> glass transition temperature but it is totally consistent with basic
>> concepts in chemistry and I have no reason to believe it shouldn't work-
>> great work-around for a problem!
>>
>> As for using air for the "bearings", this was certainly used early in the
>> video world. The first commercial video tape was 2" quadraplex. The
>> machines used air between the heads and the tape to allow the tape to run
>> properly. This is one of the reasons that the 2" machines needed a
>> compressor to function. Another approach that has been used is water- yep,
>> water (now I've got to ask you, Richard, not to laugh). An Ampex engineer
>> found that if you increased the humidity in the playback environment (NOT
>> storage) with tapes that would not play back, the moisture from the humid
>> air worked as a lubricant and you could often get the tapes to play. Other
>> people have used alcohol to the same effect.
>>
>>
>> Peter Brothers
>> SPECS BROS., LLC
>> 973-777-5055
>> [log in to unmask]
>> Audio and video restoration and re-mastering since 1983
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List [mailto:
>> [log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Richard L. Hess
>> Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2016 2:04 PM
>> To: [log in to unmask]
>> Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] One more sticky-shed data point - Richardson
>> treated tape
>>
>> Hi, Peter,
>>
>> I do not like the term Loss of Lubricant ever since Benoit Thiebaut
>> performed mass spectroscopy on a whole bunch of tapes. All of them seemed
>> to have their (~500 g/mol) complement of lubricant. All of them had less of
>> the long chains (~50,000 g/mol) binder structure. All of the defective
>> tapes showed a substantial increase of ugly sticky material
>> (~5,000 g/mol). I believe that this is what you call oligimers--small
>> chains of sub-components that once made up the long chains that were ideal.
>>
>> Couple that with the limited lab testing Dr. Richard Bradshaw was able to
>> do for me a decade ago showing that the glass transition temperature of
>> degrading (3M175, I believe, that was squealing) had fallen below room
>> temperature. He estimated the Tg at about 8 °C.
>>
>> So, with all that said, although we have enough lubricant for normal
>> conditions, the tapes have degraded in such a way that the original
>> lubricant load, while still there, is not enough to be effective in view of
>> the degraded binder components.
>>
>> So, there are two things that can work in addition to baking:
>> (1) Over-lubricate. It's not loss of lubricant, it's that the included
>> lubricant is inadequate to do the necessary job.
>> (2) play the tape at a temperature below its current Tg so that the mag
>> coat goes back to smooth from rubbery at the playback point.
>>
>> I agree that hydrolysis is the major failure mode that we see and it
>> indeed may be the root cause behind the dropping of the Tg, but knowing
>> that the Tg has fallen below room temperature gives us another tool for
>> playback.
>>
>> Jay McKnight likes the idea of increasing playback speed and I've been
>> successful with that with some Shamrock squealers. The theory here is that
>> another common substance becomes the bearing in this case: air.
>> Don't laugh (Peter, you know), air bearings were common in later model
>> videotape machines and I believe early data transports which also had
>> vacuum columns to take up the slack when there were many start/stop cycles.
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Richard
>>
>>
>> On 1/20/2016 4:50 PM, lists wrote:
>>
>>> Hallo again:
>>>
>>> LOL does not respond well to baking. If the lubricant is gone, it is
>>> gone- baking will have no effect. If the lubricant has crystalized,
>>> the crystals will melt near room temperature- again, no reason to bake.
>>> Note; both
>>> assertions backed up by laboratory testing. If you are baking standard
>>> audio cassettes successfully, they probably have some degree of
>>> hydrolysis.
>>> It appears somewhat different as the binder is thinner (less binder to
>>> decay), the interface between the tape and heads is smaller (less
>>> surface for frictional problems to be noticed) and many of the
>>> cassettes are not backcoated (less tendency to hydrolyze so less
>>> oligomer residue). We have encountered many audio tapes with
>>> hydrolysis. The effects on the tape just appear different than on
>>> larger tapes. It is one of the reasons I'm not particularly fond of
>>> the popular term "sticky shed" when the actual problem is "binder
>>> hydrolysis". Hydrolysis can easily cause tapes to have a higher
>>> frictional coefficient without significant, visible shedding. Ok,
>>> "sticky
>>> shed" sounds way cooler but it can obscure the actual chemical
>>> reaction that is happening and result in incorrect assumptions. If
>>> your audio tapes jam, stick or run slow in your machinery and respond
>>> to "baking", the problem is much more likely to be hydrolysis than LOL.
>>>
>>> As for video tape, nearly all 1/2" open reel videotapes now exhibit
>>> hydrolysis to some degree. The majority of 3/4" video made between
>>> 1975 and
>>> 1985 also exhibit hydrolysis (ok, Il use "sticky shed"). Many Ampex
>>> 3/4 from this era are so bad that, when put in the playback machine,
>>> they almost immediately seize up and will not move. 1" and 2"
>>> videotape also frequently have sticky shed.
>>>
>>> DATs, in my experience, not so much. Yes DATs have problems but we
>>> have been able to restore DATS to playable condition by cleaning and
>>> polishing the tape surface- no baking. The DATs are shedding and
>>> won't play back properly but we have found they don't need baking-
>>> they seem to just be falling apart. There is also a problem with the
>>> load mechanism in many DAT machines that goes slightly out of
>>> alignment very easily and abrades the tape during playback transport,
>>> causing additional shedding. None of the DAT info here is backed up
>>> by laboratory testing; just my experience. If others have had success
>>> with baking, there may be a hydrolysis issue. We may have just
>>> overcome the minor hydrolysis on the surface with the cleaning and
>>> polishing.
>>>
>>> Finally, a few thoughts on signal loss with baking. It is possible
>>> that baking might cause some irregularity on the tape surface. I
>>> haven't seen laboratory evidence of this, however, and we always clean
>>> tapes after baking them so any irregularities would likely be smoothed
>>> out. I have seen tape under electron microscope[e that clearly shows
>>> tape surfaces are rougher right after manufacturing than they are after
>>> a few record/playback passes.
>>> I have always been amazed that there is no conclusive laboratory
>>> evidence for the audio loss. Everything is hearsay but it really
>>> should not be that hard to set up an easily repeatable and fairly
>>> inexpensive test for this.
>>>
>>> Another possibility is "thermal idiots". Nice technical term but,
>>> hey, the technical name for the insulating powder added to high density
>>> magnetic
>>> recording mediums to counter superparamagnetic effects is "Pixie Dust".
>>> In
>>> any case, the magnetic particles on many older analog tape had a wide
>>> range of coercivity and retentivity. This is one of the reasons for
>>> print-through where the lower coercivity pigments get affected by the
>>> magnetic field from pigments in adjacent wraps. Heat is also well
>>> known to weaken magnetic characteristics of many materials (including
>>> those the magnetic pigments are made of). If low retentivity pigments
>>> are subject to heat, it is quite possible they will lose or have the
>>> magnetic moment on the pigment effected.
>>> This is one of the ways print through is treated- the tape is
>>> wound/rewound and the low coercivity/ low retentivity pigments that
>>> picked up the print through are scrambled by the combination of the
>>> mechanical shock from transport as well as the heat generated by the
>>> transport friction; and the print through is reduced. Just an idea as
>>> far as possible loss of signal during "baking" is concerned, but it is
>>> consistent with magnetic theory.
>>> This doesn't mean I am asserting that this is what is happening, as we
>>> haven't seen a problem with signal loss, but it does match the
>>> science- now we just need someone to do some controlled testing.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Peter Brothers
>>> SPECS BROS., LLC
>>> 973-777-5055
>>> [log in to unmask]
>>> Audio and video restoration and re-mastering since 1983
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List
>>> [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Tom Fine
>>> Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2016 3:01 PM
>>> To: [log in to unmask]
>>> Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] One more sticky-shed data point - Richardson
>>> treated tape
>>>
>>> Hi Lou:
>>>
>>> I agree, having transferred 1000+ cassettes over the years, that what
>>> we call Sticky Shed has never cropped up. However, there have been
>>> cases of Loss of Lubricant (LOL) or something similar, which has
>>> rendered the cassette unplayable without baking. Baking has worked for
>>> me every time.
>>> I've encountered this mostly with black-oxide off-brand cassettes,
>>> circa 1980s and early 1990s, some of which have been mass-duped (ie
>>> professionally duped and packaged for mass-market release).
>>>
>>> The other thing I have encountered, mainly with Scotch brand CRO2
>>> tapes circa 1980s and late 1970s, is terrible warpage that leads to
>>> the tape pack sometimes being too big to fit in the shell. My solution
>>> to this has been to very carefully hand-wind enough of the tape-pack
>>> over to one side so both sides move comfortably in the shell, then
>>> splice one side into a new cassette housing, transfer both tapes and
>>> edit together in the proper sequence in the DAW.
>>>
>>> By far the biggest problem I have encountered with cassettes is the
>>> pressure pad having come unglued. I generally transplant those tapes
>>> into a new shell. You can still find screw-together C-0 cassette
>>> shells out there for sale, but I usually use one of hundreds of old
>>> Maxell and TDK tapes I've accumulated into a big box, just for that
>>> purpose.
>>>
>>> There has been talk out in the video world, some of it on the Ampex
>>> List, about certain videotape brands that develop Sticky-Shed and/or
>>> LOL. There are definitely some DAT types that develop something that
>>> makes them gooey and non-playable. I've enountered this with TDK brand
>>> DAT tapes, and baking has made them playable.
>>>
>>> When Telarc Records was reissuing their Soundstream recordings, which
>>> were on 1/2" instrumentation tapes, standard practice was to bake the
>>> tapes in a convection oven. I don't know exactly what brand and type
>>> tapes they used. I don't know enough about reel to reel digital tape
>>> systems to know if DASH tapes need baking.
>>>
>>> What is still mysterious to me is why some tapes of a type not known
>>> for sticky-shed will go sticky.
>>> For instance, Shai has reported all kinds of problems with Scotch 206
>>> in Israel. I've never had one sticky 206 tape here in the US
>>> northeast. And the same with vinegar syndrome. Some people report
>>> never having problems with Scotch 111, yet my experience is about
>>> 50-50 whether a tape will go vinegar and start edge-curling or not.
>>> Audiotape acetate-backed seems less likely, but I've sure encountered
>>> my share of those tapes going vinegar. And yet almost all types of 35mm
>>> acetate-backed audiofilm will go vinegar.
>>>
>>> -- Tom Fine
>>>
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: "Lou Judson" <[log in to unmask]>
>>> To: <[log in to unmask]>
>>> Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2016 2:36 PM
>>> Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] One more sticky-shed data point - Richardson
>>> treated tape
>>>
>>>
>>> Here's a slightly offtopic question. I shared the post of Peters' with
>>> an associate, with whom I am involved in a restoration project
>>> involving cassttes tapes from the 70s through the 1990s. We are
>>> wondering why audio cassettes are so rarely having sticky-shed
>>> problems. I know that has been discussed occasionally here, but why
>>> are cassetes relatively immune?
>>>
>>> <L>
>>> Lou Judson
>>> Intuitive Audio
>>> 415-883-2689
>>>
>>> On Jan 20, 2016, at 10:33 AM, lists <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hello all:
>>>>
>>>> Coming very late to this thread. I don't intend to talk here about Mr.
>>>> Richardson's process but, in answer to Tom's post, I'll try to
>>>> address
>>>>
>>> some
>>>
>>>> of the issues with "sticky shed".
>>>>
>>>
>>> --
> Richard L. Hess email: [log in to unmask]
> Aurora, Ontario, Canada 647 479 2800
> http://www.richardhess.com/tape/contact.htm
> Quality tape transfers -- even from hard-to-play tapes.
>
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