[QuadList] AMPEX VR-5100 WILL IT PLAY OTHER MACHNESTYPE A TAP...
Dave Sieg
dave at zfx.com
Fri May 16 14:25:24 CDT 2014
Any tape made on an IVC 1" machine will definitely not play on an Ampex
5100...
completely different format, head drum size, #heads, tape speed, etc etc
etc.
On Fri, May 16, 2014 at 3:20 PM, <COURYHOUSE at aol.com> wrote:
>
>
> Don - Well if we never getting it working that is ok too as we have
> an Ampex camera that is a nice match for it... the TelePrompTer 1
> inch tape was supposedly done on a IVC so we will try that.
> If it works that is great as we have no budget for outside services
> to convert it! So fingers are crossed!
> Ed#
>
>
> In a message dated 5/16/2014 11:41:05 A.M. Mountain Standard Time,
> dwnorwood at digitrakcom.com writes:
>
>
>
>
> I agree with many of the comments on this thread, and to be sure, the
> answer to Ed's question comes with many qualifiers. The primary reason
> that we use VPR-7900's for recovery of Type-A tapes is their ability to
> handle all three variants of the format's carrier frequencies. I believe
> the 5100 is low band only which was intended only for black and white, but
> since the Ampex format was direct record, you can still recover color from
> the lowband tapes if they contain color material. Obviously not the best
> situation, but possible. Tapes recorded in hi-band or very-high-band will
> not reproduce properly on a low-band machine.
>
> Regarding interchange, there's no doubt that the movable guides were a bad
> design. However, our experience has shown that many of the interchange
> problems were the result of incorrect adjustment of the machines more often
> than "naturally occurring" changes in the guide path. Because this was
> originally a "non-broadcast" format, much of its use was in educational or
> industrial applications, and generally with un-trained operators. My
> favorite example was a tape we received from a large university. It begins
> with no video, but on the audio track, you hear "Hey Bill, how do you work
> this thing?". Then the machine was obviously stopped, and when it was
> re-started, there was video, recorded with a setup level of about 70%!
>
> The challenges of recovering Type-A tapes can be significant, and we have
> even done custom modifications when required for special problems if the
> budget was available. When the tapes are good, the quality, especially
> from the VHB tapes can be excellent, but that is certainly the exception
> rather than the rule. Bottom line is, we're talking about a format
> developed in the mid 60's, and a lot has changed since then!
>
> Don Norwood
> Digitrak Communications, Inc.
> www.digitrakcom.com
>
>
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--
Dave Sieg
www.linkedin.com/in/davesieg
www.davesieg.com
www.scanimate. <http://www.scanimate.net>com
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