[QuadList] Fwd: Early Helical Scan concept at AMPEX
C. Park Seward
park at videopark.com
Sun May 24 17:53:45 CDT 2009
Some interesting background from Jim Wheeler.
Best,
Park
C. Park Seward
Visit us: http://www.videopark.com
Begin forwarded message:
> Subject: Re: Early Helical Scan concept at AMPEX
>
> Around 1953, Charlie Ginsberg hired Charlie Anderson and Alex Maxey
> to be on the team to develop a videotape recorder. Charlie A and
> Maxey rented an apartment in Redwood City. One evening, they were
> sitting in their living room discussing possible methods for
> recording video on mag tape. Several people had tried linear
> recording at high tape speeds and they all failed. Maxey had a
> cardboard core of a roll of toilet paper and he wrapped a long and
> narrow strip of paper around it in various ways. He liked the idea
> of a 360 degree wrap and made a sketch of a tilted scanner with in
> and out guides. It did not have to be a full 360 degrees because of
> the vertical interval. I believe that he used an audio deck as the
> base.
>
> After Maxey played with various ideas, Charlie G believed that
> helical had too many potential problems so Maxey tried another one
> of his "crazy" ideas. He used four inch wide mag tape and cupped it
> around a small diameter electric motor. This was the beginning of
> the quad format. They had calculated that they needed a 2,000 ips
> head-tape speed. Maxey found a motor that met his requirements
> using two inch wide tape.He first tried a male guide that cupped the
> tape properly. He could not get the head-tape contact he needed so
> he developed a female guide. This worked and made reasonably good
> video using a special tape that 3M had made for Ampex.
>
> Actually, Maxey did not initiate the idea of cupping the tape. That
> was Alan Camas in Chicago.
>
> Meantime, Charlie A had accidentally discovered a way of recording a
> wide bandwidth of video using a vestigial sideband FM. This meant
> that 2,000 ips was no longer required and made it easier for Maxey.
>
> Maxey was a mechanical genius and later developed both the Type A
> and the Type B formats. I was one of the engineers who developed
> the Type C format. Quad never got a SMPTE letter designation.
> Maxey is credited with inventing the word "glitch" when he was
> working on the NASA Atlas project in the late fifties.
>
> Charlie A lives in the Reno area. Both Maxey and Charlie G died
> several years ago.
>
> Jim Wheeler
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://quadvideotapegroup.com/pipermail/quadlist_quadvideotapegroup.com/attachments/20090524/e2655a6c/attachment-0004.html>
More information about the QuadList
mailing list