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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Hello,
I am not sure if this is a good forum for this inquiry, or if one exists, but here goes: I am trying to play back a very old open-reel tape recording for a friend of mine. It has some home recordings of deceased family members, etc. So basically I am trying to do audio archiving for him. I own several old open reel machines which generally have not seen much use to this point and I am certainly no expert on the format. The problem I am having is that the audio in the track/tracks where the voices are recorded has a severe 60 Hz hum over top of it. The hum is very even in amplitude and is so strong that it sounds like it is modulating the fairly faint voices underneath. I am recording to my computer and have tried filtering the hum out with software but the audio is still garbled from the strong 60 Hz signal. I am thinking that the head on the machine that was used to record these voice tracks was aligned a little off to one side or something like that and that I might be able to get a much cleaner take if I were able to move the head on one of my machines to align better with the track. I am not talking about azimuth angle but actual side to side alignment. I am not sure if this even makes sense but it is the only thing I could think of. If anybody has a better idea on this topic, I would be most appreciative hearing from you. thanks, Dave |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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dave wrote:
Hello, I am not sure if this is a good forum for this inquiry, or if one exists, but here goes: I am trying to play back a very old open-reel tape recording for a friend of mine. It has some home recordings of deceased family members, etc. So basically I am trying to do audio archiving for him. I own several old open reel machines which generally have not seen much use to this point and I am certainly no expert on the format. The problem I am having is that the audio in the track/tracks where the voices are recorded has a severe 60 Hz hum over top of it. The hum is very even in amplitude and is so strong that it sounds like it is modulating the fairly faint voices underneath. I am recording to my computer and have tried filtering the hum out with software but the audio is still garbled from the strong 60 Hz signal. I am thinking that the head on the machine that was used to record these voice tracks was aligned a little off to one side or something like that and that I might be able to get a much cleaner take if I were able to move the head on one of my machines to align better with the track. I am not talking about azimuth angle but actual side to side alignment. I am not sure if this even makes sense but it is the only thing I could think of. If anybody has a better idea on this topic, I would be most appreciative hearing from you. The first thing to determine is if the 60hz hum is actually on the tape, or whether it's being induced at playback, either through the playback head picking up some stray field, or due to a ground loop connecting the deck to the speakers. Hopefully, it's the latter - disconnect the tape machine from the computer, and take it to another room. If the hum changes, it's probably an artifact of playback. If it's the former (it's actually on the tape) all you can do is transfer the material to the computer and use some noise abatement software. //Walt |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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dave wrote:
Hello, I am not sure if this is a good forum for this inquiry, or if one exists, but here goes: I am trying to play back a very old open-reel tape recording for a friend of mine. It has some home recordings of deceased family members, etc. So basically I am trying to do audio archiving for him. I own several old open reel machines which generally have not seen much use to this point and I am certainly no expert on the format. The problem I am having is that the audio in the track/tracks where the voices are recorded has a severe 60 Hz hum over top of it. The hum is very even in amplitude and is so strong that it sounds like it is modulating the fairly faint voices underneath. I am recording to my computer and have tried filtering the hum out with software but the audio is still garbled from the strong 60 Hz signal. I am thinking that the head on the machine that was used to record these voice tracks was aligned a little off to one side or something like that and that I might be able to get a much cleaner take if I were able to move the head on one of my machines to align better with the track. I am not talking about azimuth angle but actual side to side alignment. I am not sure if this even makes sense but it is the only thing I could think of. If anybody has a better idea on this topic, I would be most appreciative hearing from you. thanks, Dave Firstly, I assume you have tried the tapes on different machines, and the hum isn't coming from the replay machine. Moving the head vertically won't do anything much for the hum, it will only increase output slightly, and reduce crosstalk from the track coming the other way. (I assume these tapes are not stereo). The hum is best removed with a tunable sharp null filter, but you will probably need one at 120Hz and 180Hz to catch the mains harmonics, as the chances are that the mains hum isn't pure 60Hz. These tracking filters are available to the professional market, but I don't know of anything on the consumer market. Ebay may be a possibility, or try and rent one for the day from your local pro rental dealer. There should be one or more in most large cities. Finally, depending on how valuable these recordings are to you or your friend, you could pay for professional restoration which will extract the maximum available, but won't be cheap. Hope this helps, but it *is* a difficult problem. S. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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"dave" wrote in message
... Hello, I am not sure if this is a good forum for this inquiry, or if one exists, but here goes: I am trying to play back a very old open-reel tape recording for a friend of mine. It has some home recordings of deceased family members, etc. So basically I am trying to do audio archiving for him. I own several old open reel machines which generally have not seen much use to this point and I am certainly no expert on the format. The problem I am having is that the audio in the track/tracks where the voices are recorded has a severe 60 Hz hum over top of it. The hum is very even in amplitude and is so strong that it sounds like it is modulating the fairly faint voices underneath. I am recording to my computer and have tried filtering the hum out with software but the audio is still garbled from the strong 60 Hz signal. I am thinking that the head on the machine that was used to record these voice tracks was aligned a little off to one side or something like that and that I might be able to get a much cleaner take if I were able to move the head on one of my machines to align better with the track. I am not talking about azimuth angle but actual side to side alignment. I am not sure if this even makes sense but it is the only thing I could think of. If anybody has a better idea on this topic, I would be most appreciative hearing from you. thanks, Dave The first thing to do is verify if the hum is actually part of the recording. It might be coming from the playback. If there is no way to get a cleaner take into your computer, then you might want to consider using a more progressive noise reduction technique. There are some programs out there that can analyze a section of the unwanted noise, from a part of the recording that has no wanted signal. It can then use this noise signature to remove the noise from the rest of the recording. This is not the same as filtering out the hum. James. ![]() |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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On Mon, 21 Aug 2006 16:09:52 GMT, "dave" wrote:
The problem I am having is that the audio in the track/tracks where the voices are recorded has a severe 60 Hz hum over top of it. Check the hum is actually on the tape. It might be coming from the recorder, either from an earth loop or because an old machine has dried-out capacitors or another fault. |
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