Abbeyroadie wrote:Hi to all contributors to this thread,
To those who may be interested and might require any further proof (allbeit hearsay from me) beyond the excellent photo posted, I had many a conversation about the "old days"with my long standing friend Dick Denney before he sadly passed. To cut along story short Dick told me that he had lost count of the times he was "called up" to sort the problems/damage caused to Hank's Meazzi's by general wear and tear / "lost oxide".
Peter Alden
When you look at the Meazzi's drum and heads assembly, it's perfectly obvious that the heads, fixed on spring loaded swivelling arms, were in contact with the drum. The drum wasn't running fast enough to create an air film, keeping the heads out of contact with the drum, as it's the case with current data storage magnetic discs (where heads are floating a very few microns from the disc surface). As a consequence, the drum ferric oxyde magnetic coating was wearing out rather quickly. May be that some PTFE (Teflon) coating above the magnetic coating could have helped.
It's been reported that Dick Denney used to replace the magnetic coating by sticking magnetic tape around the drum, which of course would also wear out...
This was a major flaw in the Meazzi drum echo unit design, and explains why it was quickly dropped by Meazzi in favor of tape units. It didn't suppress wear, but it's far easier and cheaper to replace a tape loop than a drum !...
I don't know how the heads are installed on Binson units, but the drum is not covered by magnetic oxyde coating, it's covered by steel wire, which of course is more resistant to wear...
Didier