Walters please help, How do you stripe a tape

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tangerine

tangerine

grumpy bastard
:confused: Recording engineers stripe tapes.............why

I know it has something to do with time and synchronization but what would you want to synchronize. :confused:


I have heard the reason why they stripe the tape on the frist or last track is to stop bleed over :confused:
what is bleed over :confused: :confused:
 
easy one.
striping a tape eg...with smpte (look up defn in goofgle)
is for syncing different machines.
for example in days of yore (still today)
a big studio would stripe tracks on 24 track 2 inch tape machines thus obtaining 48 tracks in sync (hopefully !)
look up smpte on the net.
in summary it (and other protocols like mtc) can be used to "lock'
different machines together.
eg...a pc running multitracks locked to a video suite.
 
manning1 said:
easy one.
striping a tape eg...with smpte (look up defn in goofgle)
is for syncing different machines.
for example in days of yore (still today)
a big studio would stripe tracks on 24 track 2 inch tape machines thus obtaining 48 tracks in sync (hopefully !)
look up smpte on the net.
in summary it (and other protocols like mtc) can be used to "lock'
different machines together.
eg...a pc running multitracks locked to a video suite.


But what's bleed over ? :confused:
 
re...bleed.
on some multitrack tape machines eg..half inch or the old fostex a8 for example - an 8 track machine - if the level is very high on one track it can leak over across the tape to adjacent tracks is about the best way i can put it. get an old fostex a 8 and slam it with some level and youll hear the effect.
peace.
 
Let it bleed

Bleed-over is when the signal on one tape track "bleeds over" to adjacent tracks. For example, if you hit track 2 too hard and really saturate the tape, you can hear some of track 2 on tracks one and three, the magnetic signal "bleeds over."

If someone stripes a tape on the edge tracks (typical), it's for two reasons:

1.) because the tracks on the edge of the tape can become damaged the easiest, you typically would want to use the edge tracks for information that is the least delicate. This is why on non-striped tapes you'll often find the bass and kick tracks relegated to the outer tracks on the tape, because the lower frequency signals are more robust/resistant to oxide layer loss, edge fraying, etc.


2.) You can hit the edge tracks hard (high magnetic saturation levels) with the striped timecode to make it that much more robust against damage. Plus timecode signals aren't as delicate as, say, the high frequency response required to get the "air" on a vocal track, so they can survive on the edges better than the recordings themselves. Then you put the music tracks in the middle of the tape; this not only keeps the music away from the edges, but keeps it away from portential magnetic bleedover from the outer stripe tracks.

G.
 
manning1 said:
re...bleed.
on some multitrack tape machines eg..half inch or the old fostex a8 for example - an 8 track machine - if the level is very high on one track it can leak over across the tape to adjacent tracks is about the best way i can put it. get an old fostex a 8 and slam it with some level and youll hear the effect.
peace.


sorry manning1 I was trying to catch a WALTERS :(
 
tangerine said:
sorry manning1 I was trying to catch a WALTERS :(

This thread is even funnier because I knew what you were doing and you actually got responses! hahahahahaha

On the sad side, I almost clicked on a walters thread!
 
7string said:
This thread is even funnier because I knew what you were doing and you actually got responses! hahahahahaha

On the sad side, I almost clicked on a walters thread!
I did. Am I ever sorry. Of course all I do is post links to recording books... :rolleyes:
 
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