No, they are not. Using a 115V demag on 230/240, you run the serious risk of burning the coil.. Are they generally multi-voltage or it does not matter with these devices.
No, they are not. Using a 115V demag on 230/240, you run the serious risk of burning the coil.. Are they generally multi-voltage or it does not matter with these devices.
Yes, and with a little research and experimentation . . . .One word of warning with the vintage style tape head demag ,
it often has an exposed metal pole piece ,
You do not want this coming into contact with the head surface especially , but any metal on metal contact is to be avoided , in the studio a demag always has the pole piece wrapped in some cotton cloth . It will readily cling and buzz to magnetic materials as previously mentioned .
Dont bother buying a vintage demag ,
get the one on Ebay , and when your girlfriend asks for an explanation to why you have a sex toy on the bench you can send her away with a little twinkle in her eye and a blush on her fanjita
If a machine is in serious need of a de mag it can cause little clicks in addition to high frequency loss.
It’s a guess but I think because it randomly changes the polarity of some magnetic domains. Like a DC offset.I always believed it affected S/R primarily and HF loss secondly, so I'm wondering how it causes clicks?
Maybe was at the junction of the loop where tape is joined - magnetisation of any part would cause this as there would be a departing and entering polarised magnetisation of the joint edges if it occurred after erase/record heads.I had clicks appearing on tape on the Copicat ,
never figured out which part it was but it was gone after demaging the tape path .
"running" might not be the best description as it should be a very slow travel across the entire tape path, and since the field is already vibrating at 50/60Hz I never felt the need for me to do any 1Hz "back and forth" funny stuff. Everyone has their own education, I learned from one of Les Paul's techs, and the procedure was verified by mentors along the way. Lets just do it!The process was to turn on the unit well away (2M is plenty) from the tape deck with all tapes at least 3M away (we never did it with the tapes in the control room anyway) and bring the tip to the head being demagged and running it back and forth across the surface gradually pulling away while still using the same back and forth motion, repeating this three times then moving to the next head, tape capstain and tape guide posts. This slowly collapsing alternating mag field leaves the heads in a magnetically neutral state.
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