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#1
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99% rubbing alchohal recomended for cleaning the tape?
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#2
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Not cleaning actually. What these tapes need is baking: the problem <ith EIAJ tapes has been found a long time ago to be sticky shed syndrome. The urethane binder loses its bonds which are replaced by water molecules, softening it enough to shed and stick on the transport with a horrible squealing noise.
If your tapes do not squeal, don't bother. If they do, you can "bake" them to 55°C for the time it takes to remove the water (it can be a day or two for a 1/2" tape), after which it is playable for a few weeks, and then progressively reverts to its shedding condition, but not worse than it was before. A tape can be baked several times, so put the tape back into storage when you have made a copy, for future use. There are several ways to "bake" a tape, and a kitchen oven is most definitely not one of them, it cannot regulate at such a low temperature and is perfectly able to melt the plastic, tape and reel alike. You can use a food dehydrator, or a laboratory oven, or even a cardboard box, a hairdryer and an industrial thermostat - which is what I do and it works well. BTW the meter doing strange things at power-up is very common for machines of this age, it doesn't imply that there is a problem. Sorry, I can't see the needle on your video. Last edited by jlb2; 05-14-2014 at 04:28 PM. |
#3
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Silica gel cat litter is cheap and works great for this purpose - or you can re-use those little pouches you sometimes get in things you buy, but be sure to bake them too if they have sat around a while or they'll be saturated with moisture already and won't do any good. Just be sure to make a small cloth/paper towel pouch or a smaller plastic bag in which you've pricked a bunch of holes with a pin so the crystals don't get all over your tape. Anything vapour permeable but not too porous is fine. |
#4
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talking and to a friend and found out he used to service vtr's 20 years ago owns his own video production company that rents gear says i need to clean my heads from what i showed him
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#5
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Quote:
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enough to break them if you are not extra careful. There are specific flat-shaped chamois tips made specifically to clean the video heads without applying pressure on them, they can be a good investment. Check this page for a description of the procedure. It may be a good idea to ask your friend to show you how to do it the first time, if he's good he will save time and avoid nasty problems. While you're at it you can also ask him if he doesn't have a service manual by any chance |
Audiokarma |
#6
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pulled it outa the case to look inside some signs of humidy damage http://youtu.be/3tM1lg89QIo aka lots of dirty contacts o i finaly got some audio to come through Last edited by 1ajs; 05-15-2014 at 04:52 PM. |
#7
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well this is a giant leep
havent done much other then run it http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x42Ps...ature=youtu.be |
#8
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As regards the problems with the monitor, the signal looks good except for those oblique bars appearing from time to time, which might be caused by a parasitic video signal (make sure nothing else is hooked to your monitor and VTR while playing the tape). The sync is not very stable but appear healthy. The vertical sync losses might be caused by the monitor (some are very sensitive to the fairly poor sync level and stability which are normal for an EIAJ deck), adjusting the vertical stability adjustment could help too. But they don't seem to caused by drop outs, as is usual in this format. Anyway the tape looks very clean, especially for an EIAJ tape. |
#9
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#10
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definatly got sticky tapes part of my problem
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Audiokarma |
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