The AG-440C-8 has its own manual, as it should. The earlier versions had a supplemental manual to be partnered with the standard 1/4”~1/2” AG-440 machines. Here’s the AG-440C-8 manual:
https://www.torridheatstudios.com/A...aintenance Manual (June 1974, 4890332-01).pdf
You’re welcome.
That box…from the blurry picture of the guts of the box I was able to read the p/n off the PCB and, looking in the manual above, I find that is the torque delay module. The AG-440 was never designed to handle 1” tape…none of it. It was a kludge. So there were things they needed to glom on to it to get it to work acceptably well as far as tape handling. In order for it not to take forever to reach proper speed in PLAY, the torque delay module effectuates a delay in the holdback tension of the supply reel motor, so the capstan drive and takeup tension aren’t working against that when you go from STOP to PLAY. There is also torque boost module that gives the takeup motor some extra juice at the same time…that’s the big box smack in the middle of the underside of the transport where the signal electronics power supply usually goes on a standard 1/4”~1/2” AG-440.
I hope, when they removed the DC capstan and retrofitted the AC capstan, and put the sleeve on the shaft, they did what was necessary to ensure proper switching occurs in the signal electronics for proper EQ curves for 30ips, and that the proper daughter boards and components are in place for this…so your speed switch still works, right? You can run it at 15ips and 30ips? Don’t have any documented response curves for the machine?
I don’t think I’d ever operate an AG-440 or MM-1x00 machine above 15ips. They don’t generally have the capability to really take advantage of the potential increase in HF performance (limitations in the head construction) one would get at 30ips, which is one of the reasons people run the higher speed, except for maybe the latest generation of MM-1200 machines? But the bigger issue is the loss of LF performance…when you double the speed it shifts the response curve up an octave. The AG-440 and MM machines, particularly the machines with the wider track format (like your 1” 8-track, as opposed to the 2” 24-track) are famous for the LF head bump and what it does to source material like drums and bass…it’s in the wrong spot at 30ips. You do get some signal to noise ratio benefits at the higher speed, but IMO the detriments at 30ips outweigh the benefits on a machine like yours…minimal HF benefit, tape costs double, lose the LF shizzle…Food for thought. To quote a friend of mine, “Set it up NAB at 15ips and it’ll sound like an Ampex.”