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CED Digest Vol. 3 No. 19 • 5/9/1998 |
Date: Thu, 07 May 1998 02:05:33 -0700 From: Tom Howe To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: RE: belt size for sgt100? The flat neoprene belt that drives the turntable in RCA's F and G players has an inside diameter of 21.8" and a width of 0.187". The FR21.5 belt from PRB is the nearest stock equivalent that will work fine as a replacement. This should be available from any repair shop that carries PRB belts, which is the name brand most widely stocked. This belt will also be available from CED Magic for $2 when I get the Belt Replacement Guide completed in about another 3 weeks. --Tom Howe http://www.cedmagic.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Sat, 09 May 1998 12:15:17 -0700 From: Neil Wagner To: *CED Digest <ceds@teleport.com> Subject: Videodisc History - Part 24 >From the August 1982 Popular Science - Optical disc can store an encyclopedia - Part 3 by John Free ------------------------------------------------------ New recorders capture images, computer data, or audio for instant playback ------------------------------------------------------ [Sorry for the delay. Parts 1 and 2 of this article appeared in CED digest volume 3, numbers 16 and 17.] Pits and blisters One of the earliest experimental optical-digital-disc systems was developed by Philips. Its tellurium-coated discs have a hermetically sealed air space. For archival storage, the micron-size pits must remain perfect for many years. But air or water vapor oxidizing tellurium after the pits are formed creates defects. The 3M Co. developed an approach that avoids tellurium altogether. Its experimental discs have three layers: a high-melting-point plastic on the surface, a plastic be- neath it that creates gas when heated, and a reflective surface on the bottom. A laser heating the middle layer causes a bubble to form on the outer surface. To read the disc, a laser beam shines through the bubble and is reflec- ted from the bottom layer. Proponents of 3M's technique claim a "cleaner" signal with the neat bubbles during playback; pits burned in metal have jagged edges that produce signal noise with stray re- flections, they say. But an RCA researcher cites the frail- ty of the bubbles as one of the reasons his firm abandaned the bubble approach. Drexler Technology's Drexon discs have minute silver halide spheres and filaments distributed in a plastic, making it reflective. These metal particles absorb laser light during the "write" process, and have lower reflectivity (like pits in thin-metal discs) during playback. Electronic offices Although the recession may slow introductions, optical digi- tal recorders have been under development since the 1960's, and various systems using the hardware are finally on the way. Toshiba has an office system with a built-in laser printer to produce copies of documents stored on optical discs. The unit also has a facsimile scanner to convert printed or type- written material into electronic signals for disc storage. A Philips system, called Megadoc, has similar capabilities. One disadvantage of optical discs, the inability to erase them for reuse, may not be overcome until the 1990's. But meanwhile, permanent-storage digital discs are expected to have a major impact on automated office systems and on systems used for storage of huge computer data bases. How about optical digital recorders for the home? RCA's Bartolini is skeptical. "Playback of digital samples is more forgiving," he said. The technology in conventional consumer- model disc players is adequate for playback, Bartolini ex- plained, but the ultra-precise standards needed to record micron-size pits are an obstacle to home machines. [A photo accompanies the article showing two engineers holding up an optical disc, with the apparent reading/writing device in the foreground. The caption reads "High-density optical- storage disc, patented by these RCA researchers, holds 100 billion bits of information on two sides--enough for an entire encyclopedia."] [Another photo shows a consumer-looking player/recorder, along with a cutaway drawing of the read/write mechanism and a cross-section of a disc showing the pits recorded on it. The caption reads: "At a ralroad station in Kyoto, Japan, a travel agency has been using Matsushita's still-picture video recorder to show travel scenes for its package tours. The new opti- cal-disc recorder-playback unit (photo) can store 15,000 frames of TV pictures. Unlike most conventional methods of information storage, the disc recorder needs no processing time. Connect a TV camera or another source of video sig- nals--say, a freeze-frame tape machine--and the disc recor- der can "grab" individual TV frames. A built-in microcom- puter aids retrieval of frames within 0.5 second. Matsushita's recorder employs technology similar to that going into prototype optical-digital-disc machines: A solid- state laser "burns" a pattern representing each TV frame into a thin film of material on the disc. To play back the recording, the same laser, operating at reduced power, beams light on the concentric groove used for each picture. Re- flected light is then reconverted into the original TV image. During recording the video signal varies the intesity of the laser beam. A chain of pits (diagram) with different reflectivities is created on a tellurium suboxide layer. The beam penetrates a thin protective disc layer. A linear motor and encoder position the laser for recording and playback."] -- Neil - nw1@gte.net
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