[QuadList] VTR introduction anniversaries: 1965

george keller georgenann at aol.com
Thu Feb 10 09:36:38 CST 2011


The 1200 and 2000's had big hot record "Vlaves" in the RAPA's and Nuvistors in the heads.

At CBS in the "later Years" I pulled all the record amp tubes out and threw them away.  Also removed the fan in the head channel housing, didn't need it, filter too, no need to replace it ever and less dirt being slung around the place. Also the cabeling associated with record from the head channel housing. Kept the modulator.

I don't think anyone will be doing any 2" recording on those machines anyway.

Also pulled "Erase Head Chassis" and anything else I could find that wasn't needed anymore.

I would have pulled the Editec, Editor and VHO but couldn't find one of the original "Dummy Plugs".

I did the same on the last 2 AVR-1's located at "Archives".

I just liked the "Clean Machine" look and anything that made getting around the inside a bit easier made life a little "Better".

Please don't tell any of my bosses, they might be mad.  OH - Nevermind, they have all retired, like me.

George Keller




-----Original Message-----
From: Don Norwood <dwnorwood at embarqmail.com>
To: Quad List <quadlist at quadvideotapegroup.com>
Sent: Thu, Feb 10, 2011 10:13 am
Subject: Re: [QuadList] VTR introduction anniversaries: 1965


Apparently you don't need recapping at all Guy!  The record amps did have tubes in the VR-2000, 3 in each channel!
 
Don

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Guy Spiller 
To: Quad List 
Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2011 8:47 AM
Subject: Re: [QuadList] VTR introduction anniversaries: 1965


I seem to remember the VR-2000B that I worked with back in the day, also had tubes in the four record amps....similar to the early TR-70s.  
Seems like those big tube record amps were one of the major differences between a 1200 and a 2000.
But, then again, my memory may need recapping.
Guy

On 2/10/2011 8:39 AM, Chill315 at aol.com wrote: 
I got the brains working a little better.
 
The tubes in the VR-2000 were in the Mark 10 head pre-amp.  These were the four Nuvistors.  Don't see those any more.  The manual that came with my 1200 talked about shorting bars in the head pre-amp to reduce the gain.  I have no idea how that worked.
 
There TR-70 had a modification kit for the machine to replace a tube driver in the record amps.  It was something I remember the U of M Dental school operator showed me.  
 
Those were the only tubes that I am aware of other than the scope and monitors in the units.  
 
The audio was transistorized as stated in another reply.  There were several modification bulletins for this part of the machine.
 
Chris Hill
WA8IGN
 

In a message dated 2/9/2011 11:12:09 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, park at videopark.com writes:
 



_______________________________________________
lease trim posts to relevant info when replying!
end QuadList list posts to QuadList at quadvideotapegroup.com
our subscribe, unsubscribe and digest options are here:
ttp://mail.quadvideotapegroup.com/mailman/listinfo/quadlist_quadvideotapegroup.com

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://quadvideotapegroup.com/pipermail/quadlist_quadvideotapegroup.com/attachments/20110210/ca26b74d/attachment-0004.html>


More information about the QuadList mailing list