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CED Digest Vol. 2 No. 50 • 12/13/1997 |
Date: Sun, 07 Dec 1997 15:38:30 +0200 From: sobel To: Tom Howe <ceds@teleport.com> Subject: items for sale For sale--three SJT 400 RCA Selectavision players with remotes/owners manuals plus 650 TITLES (approx 250 still in shrink wrap) including doubles, interactive discs, and holocaust (4 disc set). Want to sell as package deal to the highest bidder. All bids considered. write to: drilnfil@mailexcite.com or call +972 50 391121 Thanks, Hal ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: "Zach D." To: Tom Howe <ceds@teleport.com> Date: Sun, 7 Dec 1997 11:04:43 -0500 Subject: Digest Entry For auction: Hope this goes out with the digest soon! The auction will run 7 days starting now! Thanks Tom! I've been holding out on this item for some time, but I hope to move in January and am raising all the funds I can for the move. The item is original RCA part nm. 153331 'TOOL'. You use it to see if the wheel of your player is spinning right at 450 rpm like it should. I have put this item at EBAY auction web just to save time since they take care of bidding on things (it's an auction). If you aren't familiar with EBAY, let me know. If you are, or you're not.. it's very simple at the URL to visit where you can read the description below, see the pictures, and put in a bid is: http://komodo.ebay2.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2873830 More description as listed on EBAY: This is a neat little tool for those who are proud owners of an RCA or compatible CED movie disk player. It was used by technicians to make sure the platter was revolving at the correct speed. There are complete instructions for it's use included. Basically, you remove the cover from player, put in a disk, put the spindle wheel on top of the disk and start it playing. If the wedges on the disk don't move, the disk is spinning at 450 RPM (really fast compared to 33 1/3 ehh?). If they appear to be turning clockwise or counter clockwise then the platter is spinning either too slow or fast. That's basically what it does. A very useful tool for someone still tinkering with an RCA player, or better yet, something neat to go along with your collection even if you aren't a guru of repairing forgotten technology. Condition: The wheel and instructions are in excellent condition. The envelope they come however has been dog eared and ruffled some as seen in the scan. <!-- Picture at: <img src="http://users.hub.ofthe.net/~zachd/www/wheel.jpg"> --> Thanks! p.s. Would also consider trades on this but only for CEDs on my top 5 most wanted list! I really need the money more! TTYL, ZD ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Net's Best Virtual Flea Market: Vinyl-8 Tracks-Computers-Board Games-CEDs-Video Games-Books - Collectibles http://users.hub.ofthe.net/~zachd/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: THX70MMDTS Date: Sun, 7 Dec 1997 18:42:49 EST To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: Re: CED Digest Vol. 2 No. 49 In a message dated 97-12-07 07:51:11 EST, you write: << Can somebody talk about something other than reviving the CED??? This is getting ridiculous. We all know why the CED failed and why they will never start making CED's again..... Geeez.... Whatever happened to the good old days when people had discs to sell???? C'mon people this is turning into something similiar to the DAT group I subscribed to.... After a while all people wanted to do was create and sell bootleg tapes and not talk about the technology anymore...... >> AMEN!!!!! If I read one more posting asking for "MIB" on CED I'll quit subscribing to the CED Digest. I love RCA's terrible format for what it was and still is today...THE VIDEO EDSEL. Ford won't make you anymore Edsels and you're not getting any new CED movies either. What's the point? The fun of CED is that it is DEAD. Same reason I like LPs and 8-tracks, hell I NEVER buy new stuff on LPs. Tony -and don't bombard me with hate mail, it'll only further cement my position on this subject. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: LLP33 Date: Sun, 7 Dec 1997 22:27:43 EST To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: Re: CED Digest Vol. 2 No. 49 Now show the patents to the NSF!!!! ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Mon, 08 Dec 1997 04:20:33 -0800 From: Tom Howe To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: SelectaVision Holotape Hello All: I've been asked the question, "How is it possible to record video on Saran Wrap?", which in thicker form was the material used in RCA's early Holotape format. RCA dumped the Holotape format in the development stage in favor of CED for unerasible storage, and MagTape for erasible storage, with MagTape eventually being dumped in favor of VHS. The following article published 28 years ago in _Spectrum_ was recently posted to the Dead Media list, and provides a good explanation of how HoloTape worked: Source: "Color TV tape player employs lasers and holography" IEEE Spectrum 6 (Dec 1969): page 28 "A laboratory model of a low-cost television color tape player built around lasers and holography and destined for home use in the early 1970s was exhibited recently by RCA. In commercial form, the SelectaVision player, which will be designed to attach to any standard color television set, will play full-color programs recorded on tapes made of the same clear, inexpensive plastic materials used in super-markets to wrap meats. "These tapes will be scratch proof, rustproof, and virtually indestructible under normal use. The conversion process is described as follows: a color program originating from a color television camera or color videotape player is recorded on conventional film by means of an electron beam recorder. This film, known as the color encoded master, is then developed and convened by a laser to a series of holograms recorded on a plastic tape recorded with photoresist, a material that hardens to varying degrees depending upon the intensity of the light striking it. "Next, the tape is developed in a chemical solution that eats away the portions of the photoresist not hardened by the laser beam. The result is a relief map of photoresist whose hills and valleys, and the spacing between, represent the original color television program in coded form. This is called the hologram master. "The hologram master is plated with a thick coating of nickel and stripped away, leaving a nickel tape with the holograms impressed on it like a series of engravings. This is the nickel master. "Finally, by feeding the nickel master through a set of pressure rollers along with a transparent vinyl tape of similar dimensions, the holographic engravings on the master are impressed on the smooth surface of the vinyl as holographic reliefs. The result is a SelectaVision program tape ready for home use. "Playback of such a tape requires only that the beam from a very-low-power laser pass through it into a simple, low-cost television camera that sees the images reconstructed by the laser directly, and their colors as coded variations in those images. The playback mechanism, the laser, and the television camera are all housed in the SelectaVision player, which is attached to the antenna terminals of a standard color television set for actual viewing." ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Mon, 08 Dec 1997 11:44:27 -0600 From: fuselier To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: sell player and discs I have approx 70 RCA CEDs and a Radio Shack player with complete service manual. I need the room and will sell all for $100 http://www.detnet.com/fuselier ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: LAWPATS Date: Tue, 9 Dec 1997 13:04:31 EST To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: subscribe I'ld like information on purchasing a rebuilt disc player -- does anyone sell such a thing. I have several non-working players thanks for any help ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: "Daniel P. Cayea" To: "Tom Howe" <ceds@teleport.com> Subject: Telecom's CED Library Date: Wed, 10 Dec 1997 19:49:09 -0500 Telecom Technologies' National Capacitance Disc Library as many have pointed out will have a difficult task managing the whole collection of CED Materials, this can be done and it shall. To obtain information on the library write to cayead@westelcom.com or to subscribe to the newsletter write to the same address and place the words SUBSCRIBE NCDL in the subject line. Sincerely Dan Cayea
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