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dfgh11
New member
I was demagging recently when the power tripped just as I was near the record head. Now when I record or play back, with high frequencies I get pops that cut out slightly. I take it this head is shot?
dfgh11 said:I was demagging recently when the power tripped just as I was near the record head.
dfgh11 said:It was a hand held model.But I'm not really sure how powerful it is. Is there anywhere I can get a more powerful demagging device? Sounds Silly but how about if I tape two demags together to try undo the damage?
Peck said:I've been reading in a lot of interviews, that the han-d-mag is the only demagnitizer you should use. Who knows if that's true? Some reputable users though with a long history in analog recording... so I would think it is pretty good advice.
dfgh11 said:I was demagging recently when the power tripped just as I was near the record head.
Beck said:(Well actually the one where I wake up and there’s this old lady standing in my room in a black Victorian era dress is my worst nightmare. This has been a reoccurring dream since I was 17. Her name is Patricia Turner… I found her grave at a local cemetery after seeing her gravestone in one of my dreams. After all these years I’m still not sure what she wants… she never says a word. Women! even when they're dead you can't figure them out)
dfgh11 said:well I've further investigated the problem and the gargling sound on frequencies about 600hz and higher is only present on tracks 1 to 4. Would this be due to the demagging? I was having problems on tracks 1 and 16 before this whole thing happened, with loss of gain/frequencey, which was why I was demagging and going to realign in the first place.
dfgh11 said:well I've further investigated the problem and the gargling sound on frequencies about 600hz and higher is only present on tracks 1 to 4. Would this be due to the demagging? I was having problems on tracks 1 and 16 before this whole thing happened, with loss of gain/frequencey, which was why I was demagging and going to realign in the first place.
Beck said:The initial information gives every indication of a fault during the degaussing process, which produced signs consistent with significantly charged heads. (basic rules of troubleshooting anything form cars to PCs)
1. What was user doing immediately before malfunction was detected?
2. Is there a relationship – cause/effect between the action of the user and the new problem/s?
3. What known problems existed that need attention?
Advice on basic maintenance – cleaning and damaging is particularly appropriate on a home recording form, where many new owners of used equipment aren’t even aware that these procedures are necessary or how to carry them out.
Those of us who have been using analog tape machines for many years are quite familiar with the oxide buildup unique to edge-tracks.
Maintenance advice is repeated by many of us here because we’ve been there. The machines I’ve seen abandoned by their owners as “broken” due to sticky-shed alone… it’s just pitiful, and all for lack of knowing things we discuss here on a regular basis.
It may well be a given machine will ultimately require more than just routine maintenance. However, these basic steps are still best practices as first steps.
The basic stuff first… you can always tear your machine apart later.
You should find helpful, J. McKnight’s technical paper on demagnetizing, and a nice guide to maintenance from Ray Rayburn’s soundfirst.com
http://home.flash.net/~mrltapes/mcknight_demag.pdf
http://www.soundfirst.com/cleandemag.html
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