
evm1024
New member
Starting a new thread to explore demagnetization of heads. From fienlly nack in to analog
Just a few thought come to mind....
The compass needle will indeed be drawn to ferrious materials. However it will not show a preference as to north or south when the material is not magnetized. It is a crude magnetmomoter. (sp)
I can understand your desire to let us know that demagnetizing is rarely needed. And that is a good thing. With that said, what harm comes from excessive demagnetizing?
Do you think that demagnetizing a deck that you do not know the history of is a waste of time or un-needed?
I grew up with the common practice of demagnetizing the tape path every so many hours. I presume that this practice came about in a time when it was actually needed.
This presumes that the tape available had less signal, was more prone to ereasure and so on. Is this true? Or was this the results of horn rimmed glasses engineers (with pocket protecters) going overboard?
It is an interesting discussion.
Wil816 said:The screwdriver's magnetism is nothing compared to the much more intense fields set up by the heads in normal recording. And if your compass is not attracted to a magnetic material like a tape head or a demagnetized screwdriver, it won't be able to find which direction is north either. To listen to some people, you'd think tape had to be kept away from motors (pneumatic tape recorders, anyone?) and even out of the earth's magnetic field-- which of course is impossible for practical usage.
You say "50 times." How many would it take to satisfy you? I repaired around a thousand TEACs from customers all over the hemisphere, and found that demagnetizing was never necessary for full performance. (But unlike your avalanche slope, I can't think of any situation where less that full performance from a tape recorder could cost someone their life.) While working at TEAC, I finished up an associate's degree in recording; and although we frequently cleaned the machines and practiced aligning them, the school did not promote demagnetization either IIRC.
Just a few thought come to mind....
The compass needle will indeed be drawn to ferrious materials. However it will not show a preference as to north or south when the material is not magnetized. It is a crude magnetmomoter. (sp)
I can understand your desire to let us know that demagnetizing is rarely needed. And that is a good thing. With that said, what harm comes from excessive demagnetizing?
Do you think that demagnetizing a deck that you do not know the history of is a waste of time or un-needed?
I grew up with the common practice of demagnetizing the tape path every so many hours. I presume that this practice came about in a time when it was actually needed.
This presumes that the tape available had less signal, was more prone to ereasure and so on. Is this true? Or was this the results of horn rimmed glasses engineers (with pocket protecters) going overboard?
It is an interesting discussion.