Eric Seaberg;313698 Wrote: 
> It was really dependent on the gap in the poles of the record head. 
> Smaller gap gave you more hi-freq.  It really varied from
> machine-to-machine and manufacturer-to-manufacturer.  I was happy just
> to get 22k out of the A800, but the roll-off was quite drastic above
> that.
> 
> And the S/N of this model was 7-10dB better than most anything else on
> the market, approaching 72dB in some cases (16-track/2-inch head stack)
> because the first pre-amp stage was literally inches below the heads.  
> 
> The studio I built back in '83 still has that machine.  I've offered to
> buy it from them but they won't sell it.

Many studio multi-track machines employed pre-distotion circuits in
their recording chains. The idea was that the type of distortion
produced by magnetic tape was entirely predictable therefore an
anti-signal could be generated at record time and the recording process
would cancel this out and the distortion was reduced considerably.
Easily by a factor of in excess of 10 times. Since this type of
distortion isn't actually that audiable, most engineers actually
aligned the machines to a higher recording level restoring some of the
recording distortion but improving the overall signal to noise ratio.
This process was also used on the Nagra portable 1/4 inch machines and
these machines could achieve noise figures in the 60 - 70 db range
while keeping the distortion below 0.5%.

The only problem was that the distortion was predictable for a given
batch of tape stock. This meant that the machines distortion circuitry
had to be realigned for each new batch of tape and this wasn't an easy
setup. Not too bad in a studio but I was responsible for keeping over a
100 of these machines on the road and when a new batch of tapes was
delivered to stores, life could get hectic. Especially in the mid 70's
when the dreeded tape oxide shed happened. Something went wrong with
the glue that stuck the oxide to the tape and the oxide was literaly
stripped off by the heads and it clogged up the gaps. Nothing for it
but to reject the whole batch of tape which was hundreds of rolls and
change it which meant re-aligning all those machines again. This tape
binding glue was used by a number of companies and many tape masters
from that period have lost their high frequency sparkle and sound quite
dull. When they are re-mastered onto CD you can easily hear the
difference if you compare them to the old vinyl recordings. Digitally
re-mastered doesn't always mean better! I wonder sometimes why they
don't return to the vinyl masters and process out the noise.

Actually the recording process is more complex than usually assumed
and the high frequency response is only dependent upon the head gap
width during playback. Something very strange happens when you record
and most recording heads have actually got quite a wide gap as this
inversly effects the linearity or distortion of the record head. If
it's narrow you can't generate enough magnetic field to fully magnetise
the tape without overloading the head.

The recording actually appears to take place slightly outside of the
head gap area and as far as I could detect the high frequency response
was dependent upon the straightness of the trailing edge of the
recording gap. If you put the gap under a microscope and imagine two
lines bordering the trailing edge of the gap the distance between these
lines appeared to determine the high frequency response and not the gap
itself. The position of the recording relative to the gap appeared to
be dependent on the recording bias applied. As the edge of a head was
likely to be straighter than the gap itself, most recordings were
actually much better than the resultant playback therefore old
recordings often sounded better when played on a new machine as head
technology improved. We had many recordings made on old EMI machines
and they sounded a lot beeter when replayed on a Studer. Although you
measured a roll off on the machine around 22k the recording was
probably a lot better. I made a recording on a semi-pro machine which
rolled off around 15k at 7.5 inches but playing it back on the test
tape making machine (which just happened to be a modified Studer)
producd a result that was actually pretty flat up to 20k and that was
about the limit of the Studer playback.

If you have a machine with a combined recording head then it looks
like it is impossible to have a head doing both jobs but in fact a
second gap was made in the rear of the head and as far as the recording
was concerned it appeared to use the total of the two gaps giving it
good linearity whereas for playback it depended on only the front gap
although the back gap did provide a little loss in sensitivity.

Analogue alignment was so much more challenging than digital and
producing the alignment tapes to align the machines in the first place
was a real challenge. How do you align a machine to make an alignment
tape if you haven't made an alignment tape to align it with. It's an
awful lot of trial and error. Yes you could buy them in from the
recording companies but if you checked one against another they never
agreed. 

They couldn't even agree on the correct azimuth which is essential,
making sure that the tape gap was aligned at exactly 90 degrees to the
tape. It must be absolutely identical on the record and playback
machines otherwise you stand to loose that precious high frequency, but
it should also be at 90 degree to make sure you use the maximum width of
the track and thus get the best SN ratio and if you were recording
stereo then the two tracks on the tape head should be in exact
alignment otherwise you introduce a phase error between the two
channels. Actually the heads were never that perfect so it was up to
the engineer to make allowances when he aligned the machine. 

Fortunately I never had to deal with multi-track tape machines
although I did have to maintain multi-track magnetic film machines and
produce test films but due to the rigidity of the medium and the
sprocket drive we never could get the same performance out of these.

How it ever worked so well was a real miracle but it did.


-- 
MrStan
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