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Re: [ARSCLIST] DAT libraries and issues



Hi,

The majority of the problems I have encountered with DAT tapes had to do with alignment of the heads on the DAT machine - the alignment is unforgiving.

So...if the DAT was recorded with a machine that was misaligned (which commonly happened over time), it would only play back on the same machine _without_ it having been serviced or the heads re-aligned. If it turns out that your whole collection isn't playing back, I would suspect that the machine(s) your working with may have misaligned heads. Best to bring one of the machines to a repair person and see if that corrects the problem.

The "physical" problems I have encountered with DAT tapes, have been digital dropouts - that, I'm afraid, I don't know what, if anything, can be done about; and they are, as many of you know, more significant than analogue dropouts. Yep, digital...

Best,

Alyssa.
___________
Alyssa Ryvers

Composer / Sound Engineer
Music North
www.musicnorth.com
On 6-Feb-06, at 6:39 PM, seva wrote:

i've read many threads on issues surrounding playability. the one looming now, for many people, are DAT tapes.

after completing a large archival transfer of hundreds of analog tapes, and having very little trouble (only a few needed baking, they were Ampex 407), i found it ironic to consider the next phase for most collections. when mentioning the analog tape transfers, many non-professional friends immediately wondered "wow! they were playable?", and i mentioned that they were very much so, and that my worries were much more toward the digital age media.

some who got the point mentioned that their early digital video tapes were not playing well, and even the high-density 8mm and Hi-8 video tapes... i think these were evaporated metal or metal particle, not sure, but certainly different from Scotch 111 or 207...

i wouldn't be asking for a discussion if i'd found an archived thread on this, so please forgive me if i overlooked it.

are there any known methods for playing DATs which don't want to play even on the original recording machine?

anyone willing to mention competent DAT repair places, DAT machines which seem to be more tolerant, and more gentle, to the tapes?

etc.



--
w/best regards,
seva
mastering engineer
http://www.soundcurrent.com


|| | | | | | | | Things are not what they seem to be; nor are they otherwise. -- Lankavatara Sutra



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