A tip from my audio editing days. Always lay both ends of the tape over the cut line together and make one cut. This minimises the chance of a gap exposing the heads to the splice tape.
I have a plastic spoon with a very rounded edge that I use to remove the air bubbles from behind the splicing tape. It has been in my splicing kit for years.
I recently purchased a "Roxdon" block for splicing mini DV tapes, and my experience was that it was extremely difficult to use, as its rectangular cross section geometry does not provide any grip at all on the tape. And the recess is so deep that it even renders ineffective the use of any hold down tape. I've since been fortunate enough to find an old 1/4 inch "Editall" block on Ebay, which in contrast, is properly engineered for the job and holds the work perfectly.
I think i like the concave trench, i have the feeling that a smooth shiney trench would not damage the tape and it would make a bit of surface vaccume effect being smooth and shiney. I could be talking rubbish though lol.
hi you are right about the tape and about video heads i got some poundland tape that is ok to use on audio tape like 1/4 inch up 1/8 i have to use the right tape some tape is to powerfull getting hold of 2 inch edit tape is cost big money so i have to use some thing you can't here at 15 ips
I used your link for the splicing block and tape kit, but I guess I can't buy it if I'm in the US? Most countries are listed on their site except the US. How do I purchase this?
Any chance you could share how to reattach a hi8 tape that has broken off at the start of the spool?..that little piece of plastic brick that holds the tape is a bastard to get back in with the tape aligned. Cheers
The most important thing to realize when you splice a magnetic tape is that it's a temporary solution. No matter how good your tools and materials are, sooner or later it's going to come apart again, or it's going to force you to open your player if you play the tape often enough. So once you do the repair (or once you're done being creative), make a copy of the tape and keep that as the new original. Avoid playing the splice tape as much as possible.
but when the stuck piece of film passes through the head the deck will be forced to make a noise and the camera will stop writing or playing the cassette
Hmm... Two questions. 1. Why didn't these metal Video 8/Hi8/Digital 8 splicing blocks get their way into the United Kingdom? And 2. What is Part 2 of the SRW-5500 going to be? Is it going to be an installation of the HKSR-5002 Digital Betacam playback board onto it?
1: The first 8mm block was sent by a friend in USA. He likes Hillman Avengers, so a proper good bloke. 2: Part 2 will be capturing video via SDI. If I get a HKSR-5002 then I will install it, but it's not worth spending money on.
I wonder if anyone can help me. I have twenty or thirty 8mm video cassettes I'm trying to play, I have tried to play them in a video 8 camcorder but they slide in but the door will not close which maybe a faulty camcorder, I'm not sure. The tapes were all recorded on the same camera now lost, and although made by different companies such as Scotch and Sony they all have the same words of *'P5-90'_ on them which I can not find any information on, nor does anyone seem to mention it an any of the videos I have watched. What I need to know is what camcorder will play them? Thanks.
hi watch the video the hold down tape is like the pound land tape i have a vac pump that hold down tape to the block rolling up tape is a pain vac pump stopped this dead bob
A tip from my audio editing days. Always lay both ends of the tape over the cut line together and make one cut. This minimises the chance of a gap exposing the heads to the splice tape.
I was going to say the same thing. I repair my reel to reel tapes that way when they snap. :) (some I've had since i was a kid in the 70's)
@@frankowalker4662 Like wise - I still have my treasured EMI jointing block and collection of coloured leader tape in the red EMI plastic cases.
@@barrieshepherd7694 Cool.
I have a plastic spoon with a very rounded edge that I use to remove the air bubbles from behind the splicing tape. It has been in my splicing kit for years.
I recently purchased a "Roxdon" block for splicing mini DV tapes, and my experience was that it was extremely difficult to use, as its rectangular cross section geometry does not provide any grip at all on the tape. And the recess is so deep that it even renders ineffective the use of any hold down tape. I've since been fortunate enough to find an old 1/4 inch "Editall" block on Ebay, which in contrast, is properly engineered for the job and holds the work perfectly.
I do agree that the curved cross section of the Editall blocks is a nice way to keep the tape stable.
I think i like the concave trench, i have the feeling that a smooth shiney trench would not damage the tape and it would make a bit of surface vaccume effect being smooth and shiney.
I could be talking rubbish though lol.
hi you are right about the tape and about video heads i got some poundland tape that is ok to use on audio tape like 1/4 inch up 1/8 i have to use the right tape
some tape is to powerfull getting hold of 2 inch edit tape is cost big money so i have to use some thing you can't here at 15 ips
I used your link for the splicing block and tape kit, but I guess I can't buy it if I'm in the US? Most countries are listed on their site except the US. How do I purchase this?
You could try emailing the supplier on info@runwayproaudio.com to see if they can do USA shipping.
Any chance you could share how to reattach a hi8 tape that has broken off at the start of the spool?..that little piece of plastic brick that holds the tape is a bastard to get back in with the tape aligned.
Cheers
On some shells it is nearly impossible, so I tend to use a spool from a scrap tape and splice the leaders together.
@@video99couk thanks for the reply..
The most important thing to realize when you splice a magnetic tape is that it's a temporary solution. No matter how good your tools and materials are, sooner or later it's going to come apart again, or it's going to force you to open your player if you play the tape often enough. So once you do the repair (or once you're done being creative), make a copy of the tape and keep that as the new original. Avoid playing the splice tape as much as possible.
In my case I do the repair, digitise the tape, and it's usually finished with at that point.
but when the stuck piece of film passes through the head the deck will be forced to make a noise and the camera will stop writing or playing the cassette
What stuck piece of film? The tape I spliced will play perfectly well, apart from the inevitable picture disturbance.
Hmm... Two questions.
1. Why didn't these metal Video 8/Hi8/Digital 8 splicing blocks get their way into the United Kingdom?
And 2. What is Part 2 of the SRW-5500 going to be? Is it going to be an installation of the HKSR-5002 Digital Betacam playback board onto it?
1: The first 8mm block was sent by a friend in USA. He likes Hillman Avengers, so a proper good bloke.
2: Part 2 will be capturing video via SDI. If I get a HKSR-5002 then I will install it, but it's not worth spending money on.
I wonder if anyone can help me.
I have twenty or thirty 8mm video cassettes I'm trying to play, I have tried to play them in a video 8 camcorder but they slide in but the door will not close which maybe a faulty camcorder, I'm not sure. The tapes were all recorded on the same camera now lost, and although made by different companies such as Scotch and Sony they all have the same words of *'P5-90'_ on them which I can not find any information on, nor does anyone seem to mention it an any of the videos I have watched.
What I need to know is what camcorder will play them? Thanks.
Certainly sounds like a faulty camcorder. I can run the tapes to video files for you, email me on colin@video99.co.uk
Hi, do you have an email that i can use too talk about sending you my camera to be fixed?
Sorry, I don't take on repairs, I have a backlog of my own equipment to work on.
hi watch the video the hold down tape is like the pound land tape i have a vac pump that hold down tape to the block rolling up tape is a pain
vac pump stopped this dead bob
Selling your house?
No, what makes you think so?
So, they are too big and important to be on your YT channel.
Yeah and we all know how a company gets to No 1 Position on Google search - and it is nothing to do with quality or user recommendation.
@@barrieshepherd7694 Ha ha, Yeah.
The owner is probably an old guy who don't use social media.