auntblabby wrote:
^^^
in 1967 at a meeting of the audio engineering society, it was described in a paper/presentation, that analog tapes recorded at 3&3/4 inches per second and below had "fugitive trebles" and suffered disproportionately from drop-outs. and many of my old cassette tapes [stored in air-conditioned low-humidity conditions for the decades] have drop-outs and muted trebles. aside from analog signals on tape, what about all those zillions of DATs and Umatic digital tapes that are now unplayable? were they ALL stored "improperly"? aside from regulated temperatures and humidity, what else is needed to "properly" store a magnetic tape? magnetic recording tape is too fragile to be a reliable archival medium, there are too many cases of stretched tapes, tapes with patches of emulsion gone, sticky-shed, splices gone bad, etc.
You are of course correct here, but the longevity of Analog tape over DAT and CD's is actually longer. Yes degradation of information and will occur with analog, but at least with analog you don't have block data errors, and there are tapes over 50 years old that are still playable and transferable.
Even though digital is a younger medium, it is much more unstable medium for log term storage, at least with currently available technology. --Mastering houses will reject Digital media if it has more that one Block Error, but they still have no issues remastering and reissuing old analog material from the 30's onwards to the 1980's.
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