haha OMG head grind. ouch! I remember when our place had lost our main compressor (central compressor was in the basement) and all the machine shut down because of low air pressure. What a scramble that was!
I find this machine incredibly interesting. All the cards, motors, noises etc. I'll never use one of these but I still find it strangely interesting to watch someone else maintain one.
Massive power supply bank! I myself perfer the old iron core transformers and massive caps to the new swichmode power supplies of today. You never really had much trouble with the old design and they were easy to fix. Nowdays a 1000 watt power supply weighs a couple of pounds but it can fail unexpectedly, can be difficult to get parts for, and it not very immune to power surges, spikes or much of anything else. I refer to swichmode supplies as "Glass PS".
if you need any parts we made them here in colorado springs for 30 years at our high precision machine shop. all the shafts, air guides,idle shafts,capstan shafts,all the mechanical for the video heads.i used to grind the pintch roller that you showed.
This is an awesome restoration project! I've always been curious about early VTR machines.
Is there a good place to read up on them further? I'm especially interested in the tube based ones. Haven't seen any videos of those yet.
From the various videos I've seen so far, it seems like people handle the tape with bare hands a lot, especially while threading. Doesn't that get the heads dirty?
Tape Ops don't wear gloves unless handling very old and important tape. You are just touching the head of the tape and it doesn't contaminate the rest of the tape. All VTRs need to be cleaned with Xylene and that will destroy any oils on the VTR. With Quad, you clean the VTR after EACH tape. The only tube VTRs were Quads from the 50's. I don't know of any operating today.
@Audiovideopark There is of course the Optavision 500 from 1961 a consumer/industrial VTR from Loewe Opta. I think I somewhere have some documentation about it scanned in.
Part 5 hasn't been started yet. Been too busy with ESPN and ABC this fall. Also, major transplants will have to be done to the machine. Stay tuned for this Spring of 2010.
Just a small note, I get all my pinch rollers redone with Terry (google Terry rubber rollers). He is a great craftsman, very precise, priced very reasonable and has saved amany machines for me. So when is part 5 ready, can't wait.
Any machine. If he has the size on file you just have to send in the old one. If not he has a little form that you fill in and it helps him determine the correct size. I used him for over 40 machines os far with great results. He really is one of a kind.
Fantastic video's.Would like to hear more about the difference between 1200
A,B and C variants.IT's ironic that we went from film to video and know back to film
to load into AVID.It's a crying shame that the BBC did not make a film copy before
they wiped all those 70's tapes and cost them millions in lost DVD revenue(DR WHO
alone )
JULIAN8845 6 months ago
Looking forward to part 5. They sure don't make kit like this any more!
Mulletsrokkify 10 months ago
Sonnygon, were you with Jackson and Heit? I know they made the scanner assemblies for a lot of those.
kludgeaudio 11 months ago
haha OMG head grind. ouch! I remember when our place had lost our main compressor (central compressor was in the basement) and all the machine shut down because of low air pressure. What a scramble that was!
rty1955 1 year ago
Wow incredible video. I enjoy watching these classic machines brought back to life.
Thank you for your videos.
vincedog3 1 year ago
Do you mean the quick freeze spray? Just hold an air can upside down and the propellent will spray out. It is super cold.
Audiovideopark 1 year ago
what kind of liquid is this spray?
fertub26 1 year ago
I find this machine incredibly interesting. All the cards, motors, noises etc. I'll never use one of these but I still find it strangely interesting to watch someone else maintain one.
artifactingreality 1 year ago
Massive power supply bank! I myself perfer the old iron core transformers and massive caps to the new swichmode power supplies of today. You never really had much trouble with the old design and they were easy to fix. Nowdays a 1000 watt power supply weighs a couple of pounds but it can fail unexpectedly, can be difficult to get parts for, and it not very immune to power surges, spikes or much of anything else. I refer to swichmode supplies as "Glass PS".
douglas787 1 year ago
if you need any parts we made them here in colorado springs for 30 years at our high precision machine shop. all the shafts, air guides,idle shafts,capstan shafts,all the mechanical for the video heads.i used to grind the pintch roller that you showed.
sonnygon 1 year ago
Hi. That's great to know. Please send contact info.
Audiovideopark 1 year ago
Not done yet. Been tied up with other projects. Coming soon...
Audiovideopark 1 year ago
where is part 5?
btown2011 1 year ago
This is an awesome restoration project! I've always been curious about early VTR machines.
Is there a good place to read up on them further? I'm especially interested in the tube based ones. Haven't seen any videos of those yet.
From the various videos I've seen so far, it seems like people handle the tape with bare hands a lot, especially while threading. Doesn't that get the heads dirty?
Maxxarcade 2 years ago
Tape Ops don't wear gloves unless handling very old and important tape. You are just touching the head of the tape and it doesn't contaminate the rest of the tape. All VTRs need to be cleaned with Xylene and that will destroy any oils on the VTR. With Quad, you clean the VTR after EACH tape. The only tube VTRs were Quads from the 50's. I don't know of any operating today.
Audiovideopark 1 year ago
@Audiovideopark There is of course the Optavision 500 from 1961 a consumer/industrial VTR from Loewe Opta. I think I somewhere have some documentation about it scanned in.
wrtlpfmpf 1 year ago
Where's part 5?
Orcinus24x5 2 years ago
@Orcinus24x5
Part 5 hasn't been started yet. Been too busy with ESPN and ABC this fall. Also, major transplants will have to be done to the machine. Stay tuned for this Spring of 2010.
Audiovideopark 2 years ago
Just a small note, I get all my pinch rollers redone with Terry (google Terry rubber rollers). He is a great craftsman, very precise, priced very reasonable and has saved amany machines for me. So when is part 5 ready, can't wait.
ShaiDrori 2 years ago
Does he make pinch rollers for other machines too or just Quad machines?
fellis45 2 years ago
Any machine. If he has the size on file you just have to send in the old one. If not he has a little form that you fill in and it helps him determine the correct size. I used him for over 40 machines os far with great results. He really is one of a kind.
ShaiDrori 2 years ago
Thanks! It sure slows down the restoration process.
Audiovideopark 2 years ago
Another great video here....and such nice production values as well.
I can surely appreciate just how much time it takes to put these videos together. Excellent job!
RCAquadruplex 2 years ago