[QuadList] Helicals, Quads
W4wj at aol.com
W4wj at aol.com
Mon Feb 8 16:04:52 CST 2010
George...
WCIX-TV in Miami had a 1200E that was not only used direct to air
from the studio, but it fit neatly in our Cortez Motor home. We could
record in motion with the GE PE250 that was mounted up front!
Very neat machine!!
73,
Don Murray, W4WJ
Fredericksburg, Texas
Retired from 40 years in Miami TV
35+ years at NBC O&O WTVJ
In a message dated 2/8/2010 3:58:26 P.M. Central Standard Time,
georgenann at aol.com writes:
I am impressed how so many of you guys remember not only the model numbers
of the helical machines but some of the history of them. I always had
trouble with model numbers, Revision Numbers, etc.
CBS only went so far as the BVH-2000's after the BVH-1100A's as far as I
can remember, although there is one PAL VPR? not sure of the number, which
fortunately has been working OK at least till I retired. There are a couple
of BVH-3100's (?) around. I don't know where they came from, perhaps a
garage sale. They have the self threading feature. I don't know anyone who
had trouble with threading up tape and it seems like a lot of work to come up
with one of those. I didn't like working on them because of the keypad on
them. Almost everything I needed to do was by inputting codes from that
damn keypad, even putting it into E-E. Fortunately there was one maint.
tech who would bail me out as she remembered the codes. When she wasn't
around it was a pain as the book was never in the same place twice.
Back to quads, before Ted fines us for chattering about helicals.
I ran into one neat machine. It is an Ampex 1200-E with the flat deck.
It belonged to Charlie (Chubby) Salvato from Orange County, NY. It was put
together by AF Assoc. They installed Volvo motor mounts on it with wheels
so it could be rolled anywhere with just your fingertips. It also had no
Amtec, Colortec, Proc, etc. They put in a CVS Digital TBC, I don't
remember the number, but it had a "16" in it (I think). CVS had a mod for it to
work with Quads, it was a board which had to be installed in it. I remember
taking it to CVS to have it done for Chubby.
This was done around the time the AVR-2 came out. Ampex propaganda had
fotos of 2 people picking up the top deck then the TBC bay and showing how
easy it was to move. Chubby bragged how easy this machine is to move. A
cavewoman could do it alone. He brought it to my home from time to time so I
could tweak the servo, etc. We just rolled it in and out of his van easily.
That was the only time I had a Quad in my garage.
It was so neat, it could be moved over bumps easily and when it stopped it
would just sit there and rock back and forth a couple of times. Then all
you had to is plug it in the wall, put video in and record or take video
from it, no need for sync gen. etc. (It still needed air). I asked him about
it some time ago, he said he sold it to a TV station in P.R.
By the way Chubby was known for his "Fire Engine". He had a big fire
engine with a 70 ft. or so ladder on it on which he had a camera mount which he
rented out for sport events. Perhaps some of you have seen it. Last I
heard, his son was running it around for him.
There was a BVT-2000 connected to the the Ampex VR-2000's, before they
were removed. It was used for SCH purposes as it was feeding Betas and D-2's.
I tried feeding the BVT-2000 right out of the Demod, but it couldn't seem
to handle the head switching. I tried widening and increasing the
switching suppression pulse but to no avail.
Another interesting thing, sometime in the 80's, my Navy Reserve unit was
having a triple Retirement and Change of Command. I was given the job of
getting it done. I was able to get the "Intrepid" in NYC for the ceremony.
While schmoozing the museum curator we came across a room full of 2"
video tapes. He told me they were recordings of flight ops. while she was in
commission. (One of the early uses of video tape was recording flight ops
on carriers so the pilots could watch their landings, and they still do.)
Also that he wanted to get them dubbed to U-Matic as he wanted to use them in
displays around the ship. (The machines they were recorded on were gone.)
I forgot all about the first thing I learned in the Navy, "Never
"Volunteer" and I offered to help him out. I also forgot how heavy a 2" reel of
tape can be after carrying them about a mile, from the Intrepid to CBS, and
back but I needed the exercise. I thought I was in deep trouble with the
first reel. I found they were recorded at 7.5 IPS. Would you believe we also
found some 5 Mil heads on the ship which were in good shape. I put one on
the Quad near my shop and had good luck with it. The only problem is they
were ball bearing heads and made about 10 DB more noise than the air
bearing heads do and I was trying to do this whole job un-noticed. Fortunately
the maint. manager at time was interested in WWII planes as his father worked
for Grumman designing some of them and let me get away with it for the
small price of VHS copies of some of the tapes. The tapes were fabulous. I
managed to do about 50 reels for him. I don't know what model VTR they were
made on.
73,
Georger Keller
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