Capstan Information
Chill315 at aol.com
Chill315 at aol.com
Wed Sep 24 10:26:25 CDT 2014
Don
That probably is the correct answer for the reason I asked. Hope you find
the drawing. Then we can find out the dimensions.
I did find out more information. Both RCA and Ampex used motors that had
a pulley and belt arrangement to the capstan shaft. Thus the rotational
speed of the motors was reduced to drive the capstan shaft. In RCA's case
the motor is specified to turn at 1800 RPM. I do not know the Ampex speed
but it might be the same looking at the drive waveform in the Intersync book.
Another interesting fact is that the Ampex shaft is machined to a spec of
plus or minus .0002 inches. There is a note in the Intersync book about
replacing the 1000 series sine wave capstan motor with a square wave motor.
It talks about protecting the shaft to prevent any damage and how damage
can cause wow and flutter.
Now as an extreme example. Suppose you have the nominal circumference of
the VR capstan at 1.5 inches. The 10 revolutions a second will pull the
tape through at 15 inches per second. The servo during record always expects
this size and is told to turn it at 10 times a second. As a result
everything is OK with locking to sync, control track pulses, etc. Go to play on
a VR machine with the same size capstan and it all works out.
Now if the circumference were a little smaller, say 1.4 inches, then the
tape is only going to be pulled through at 14 inches per second. The
recording will be off standard and a big problem. Does the electronics know? No,
because during record it is expecting the normal 1.5 inch capstan. If the
capstan were 1.6 inches, then the tape is being recorded at 16 inches per
second.
These are extreme numbers to show the issue. Fortunately we are playing
back tapes and not recording so the servos can handle minute differences
between machines. We do not have to worry about making tapes to SMPTE
standards. Only playing back. But if the capstan were worn down a lot, this
could become an issue if it got out of the capture range of the servo.
Now another thing that went through my mind. All speed designs were based
upon a black and white sync generator. So the vertical is exactly 60 Hz.
So when taking into account the 3.58 MHz color sync generator, the speed
is reduced because we are now at 59.94. The speed would be 14.985 inches
per second. Also everything above is stated using the 15 not the 7.5 speed.
A little quirk and almost too much detail.
Now the interesting question is what are the capstan differences between
the VR series and the AVR-1 plus the RCA machines. Was there a change to
the TCR-100, TR-70C and the TR-61? How about the TR-600?
Chris Hill
WA8IGN
In a message dated 9/23/2014 1:24:37 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
quadlist at quadvideotapegroup.com writes:
-----Original Message-----
From: "Don Norwood" <quadlist at digitrakcom.com>
To: "Quad List" <quadlist at quadvideotapegroup.com>
Subject: Re: [QuadList] Capstan questions
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2014 13:24:40 -0400
In reply to the original question that Chris asked, I think I have a
drawing
that shows the tolerance for the Ampex VR series capstan. I'll look for
it.
RCA used a smaller diameter capstan, so tolerances might be different in
their case.
I think everybody understands that the goal in record mode is to move the
tape at a constant and precise rate. However, that doesn't happen in real
life with the VR series as evidenced by the experiment that Chris did.
I've
seen the same thing. I'm not sure about the capstan tolerance issue, but
I
do know that tape slippage can affect the speed. This can be caused by
incorrect tape tensions, bad pinch rollers, slick capstans, or some
combination of all of the above. Further, the tape itself can slip
differently depending on the backing.
Also, in the VR decks, remember that the capstan is not directly driven.
So
the complete system includes the motor pulley, the mylar belt and the
capstan pulley. Remember that you have to properly set the tension on the
belt.
More precise control of record speed can be achieved by using a high
resolution tach that measures the tape motion, not the capstan speed.
That
technology wasn't practical in early quad machines, and as others have
pointed out, within practical limits, the error is corrected in playback
anyway.
Don Norwood
Digitrak Communications, Inc.
www.digitrakcom.com
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