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'Baking' defective open-reel tapes



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old January 18th 04, 09:52 PM posted to uk.rec.audio
RichardL
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Posts: 2
Default 'Baking' defective open-reel tapes

I have some open reel tapes which are suffering from shedding of
the oxide coating.

I understand that baking the tapes under certain strict conditions will
restore
them to a playable state, at least for a limted time.

Does anyone have experience of this problem and advice on how to do
such 'baking' ?


  #2 (permalink)  
Old January 18th 04, 10:18 PM posted to uk.rec.audio
Ian Bell
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Posts: 213
Default 'Baking' defective open-reel tapes

RichardL wrote:

I have some open reel tapes which are suffering from shedding of
the oxide coating.

I understand that baking the tapes under certain strict conditions will
restore
them to a playable state, at least for a limted time.

Does anyone have experience of this problem and advice on how to do
such 'baking' ?


If you in an any yahoo groups you could join the reeltoreel group. I
thought there might be something in the group files on this topic but I
could not find anything. however this topic has been discussed several
times and I am sure other members will have well tried recipes for baking
old tapes.

HTH

Ian

  #3 (permalink)  
Old January 18th 04, 10:47 PM posted to uk.rec.audio
Dave Plowman
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Posts: 735
Default 'Baking' defective open-reel tapes

In article ,
RichardL wrote:
Does anyone have experience of this problem and advice on how to do
such 'baking' ?


IIRC, it's in the FAQ at rec.audio.pro

--
*Your kid may be an honours student, but you're still an idiot.

Dave Plowman London SW 12
RIP Acorn
  #4 (permalink)  
Old January 19th 04, 01:53 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
DaveInRedmond
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Posts: 1
Default 'Baking' defective open-reel tapes

I have never tried it, but...

http://audio-restoration.com/baking.php

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"RichardL" wrote in message
...
I have some open reel tapes which are suffering from shedding of
the oxide coating.

I understand that baking the tapes under certain strict conditions will
restore
them to a playable state, at least for a limted time.

Does anyone have experience of this problem and advice on how to do
such 'baking' ?




  #5 (permalink)  
Old January 19th 04, 09:40 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Arny Krueger
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Posts: 3,850
Default 'Baking' defective open-reel tapes

"RichardL" wrote in message


I have some open reel tapes which are suffering from shedding of
the oxide coating.


AKA "sticky shed"

I understand that baking the tapes under certain strict conditions
will restore them to a playable state, at least for a limted time.


Right. you'll find many articles about "sticky shed" in the google archives
of rec.audio.pro .

Does anyone have experience of this problem and advice on how to do
such 'baking' ?


Check the archives, you'll find LOTS!


  #6 (permalink)  
Old January 21st 04, 07:32 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Terry
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Posts: 29
Default 'Baking' defective open-reel tapes


"RichardL" wrote in message
...
I have some open reel tapes which are suffering from shedding of
the oxide coating.

I understand that baking the tapes under certain strict conditions will
restore
them to a playable state, at least for a limted time.

Does anyone have experience of this problem and advice on how to do
such 'baking' ?



There was an article in the New scientist on this subject last year.

It takes a brave person to do this. After baking you get only one try to
play it.
After this the tape becomes too brittle for further use.

Regards


  #7 (permalink)  
Old January 27th 04, 12:56 PM posted to uk.rec.audio
James Perrett
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Posts: 58
Default 'Baking' defective open-reel tapes

Terry wrote:


There was an article in the New scientist on this subject last year.

It takes a brave person to do this. After baking you get only one try to
play it.
After this the tape becomes too brittle for further use.


From what I understand you get anything from a few hours to a few days
of use from the tape. Are you getting confused with restoring acetate
tapes?

I should also point out that most tape baking recipes are intended for
Ampex tapes made between 1975 and the early 1980's. If you have problems
with another make of tape then baking may not necessarily be the right
procedure.

Cheers.

James.
 




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