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Posted by TheFug. on 01/11/36 11:45
On Wed, 19 Apr 2006 04:04:07 GMT, "Bill Farnsworth"
<bill.farnsworth@verizon.net> wrote:
>
>"> "Steve Guidry" wrote ...
>>> You guys are missing the point of any serious effort to
>>> do archiving.
>>>
>>> The _REAL_ issue is not "how long does the media last ? "
>>> Tather, it's "How long can I keep an obsolete format player running
>>> ?"
>
>> Richard Crowley" <rcrowley@xpr7t.net> wrote I still claim there are
>> people who keep players running
>> for >90% of the tape formats ever made. Many services
>> can be found online who dub "obsolete formats".
>>
>
>Wait until the ol' rubber pinch rollers dry out and give up the ghost!
>I don't care if the deck was running when it was put on the back
>shelf, TIME will deteriorate or dry out some very key components.
>Yeah, there are some people out there who can keep things running.
>(And some of them ain't getting any younger.) But its a friggin' pain
>in the ass when you have to start searching for those guys when you
>gotta have that tape transferred RIGHT NOW.
>The cost of shipping the dead deck out, the labor, the PARTS and then,
>shipping back makes digital archiving very appealing.
>But what the hell do I know? Right?
>
>Bill F.
Yeah, even at room temperature 68F/20C my Sony Hi8 handycam had some
strange rubber defects the cassette loading clap, from some sort of
rubber got sweaty, i cant play any cassette with a good playback
picture, so now the VHS recorders/players are dissapearing, i'm
putting much of it, for a great part, onto DVD R media, i guess the
disc is more durable than CompactDisc ? because DVD R has its
(organic) dye between two plastic discs ? but how should one store
these discs ? air-tight, no humid/moisterH2o near it ?
Will the organic dye last even then ?
-- The Fug
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