[QuadList] From the TR 800 Crypt
Gary Adams
garyada at ix.netcom.com
Thu Feb 24 14:22:29 CST 2011
Thanks for jogging my memory Phil. I should have known it was you but my
memory is showing my age. I too worked a short time in this "audit" room.
Along with John Nash, Nigel Stoddard (now in Buenos Aires) and the rest of
the group from Jersey Isle. We indeed did fix the infant mortality issues
by cycling the machines for 100 hours in all modes. Unfortunately, this
took the best 100 hours off the heads and guide except for the first few I
guess. But the customer did get a better machine because of it. But we all
knew time was running out in general for RCA. Most of us were contract
workers. I still have all the manuals for those machines tucked away in
California somewhere waiting for a better home. I would guess the best of
those machines ended up at Action Video in LA where Dave Tosch (former RCA)
made them work quite well in post production. I never ran into any others.
There are lots of war stories but left for a different thread or group if
necessary. Gary
From: quadlist-bounces at quadvideotapegroup.com
[mailto:quadlist-bounces at quadvideotapegroup.com] On Behalf Of Phillip G.
Shaw
Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2011 12:08 AM
To: quadlist at quadvideotapegroup.com
Subject: [QuadList] From the TR 800 Crypt
[Quote]The first TR 800's I saw were in the QV remote truck. But the
problems with reliability were so bad that RCA assigned an engineer during
one remote in Vegas who did nothing but sit by the VTR door and waited for
one of us to yell "help, we have a runaway!".[/quote]
I was that Engineer in Vegas & Denver Mile high The problem was that RCA
had a bunch of Post Production (film type) =======
Phillip G. Shaw
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