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CHLO-E
Richard Robinson writes:
Where can one find isopropanol, these days ? I normally get it from CPC: http://cpc.farnell.com/isopropyl-alcohol-ipa They do a variety of sizes, and (usually) free postage. -- Adam Sampson http://offog.org/ |
CHLO-E
On 15/01/2017 10:16, paul wrote:
Indeed. And as mentioned, wet playing once means wet playing for ever more, plus separate headshells and styli, flagging such discs, & etc. I assumed wet playing was the final playing, for transfer to digital. Any good recipes for baking sticky open-reel tapes? -- Eiron. |
CHLO-E
paul said:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 16:49 +0200, "Iain Churches" "Richard Robinson" wrote in message news:uYudnYMuUuk4eOXFnZ2dnUU78aWdnZ2d@brightview .co.uk... Huge said: On 2017-01-13, Graeme Wall wrote: What is recommended these days for the wet transfer, just distilled water? FWIW, I use 90% distilled water (not de-ionised), 10% isopropyl alcohol and a few drops of photographic wetting agent (2.5ml in a litre). Where can one find isopropanol, these days ? I went into a local "chemist" a few months ago and asked, they looked at me like I was demented. Which may be a fair point, but not relevant here. I am not certain, but IIRC it is also known as surgical spirit or rubbing alchohol. Err, no, it's certainly not that. And discs and styli (and tape heads as well for that matter) do not take too well to the Oil of Wintergreen present in surgical spirit either (horrendous long story from my youth). Wikipedia certainly isn't very encouraging, certainly. It looks kind of mucky. Perhaps your chemist will know it under those names. You can easily check the label to make sure it is the same stuff. Indeed. And as mentioned, wet playing once means wet playing for ever more, plus separate headshells and styli, flagging such discs, & etc. -- Richard Robinson "The whole plan hinged upon the natural curiosity of potatoes" - S. Lem My email address is at http://www.qualmograph.org.uk/contact.html |
CHLO-E
On Mon, 16 Jan 2017 10:54:24 -0000, Eiron wrote:
Any good recipes for baking sticky open-reel tapes? Gently warm up to around 50 degrees C over a few hours and then allow to cool overnight before playing. Food dehydrators are often recommended although I actually use a 40W lightbulb in a potters kiln. James -- JRP Music - http://www.jrpmusic.co.uk |
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