Magnetic Recording: The First 100 YearsEric D. Daniel, C. Denis Mee, Mark H. Clark Electrical Engineering/History of Technology Magnetic Recording The First 100 Years The first magnetic recording device was demonstrated and patented by the Danish inventor Valdemar Poulsen in 1898. Poulsen made a magnetic recording of his voice on a length of piano wire. Magnetic Recording traces the development of the watershed products and the technical breakthroughs in magnetic recording that took place during the century from Poulsen’s experiment to today’s ubiquitous audio, video, and data recording technologies, including tape recorders, video cassette recorders, and computer hard drives. An international author team brings a unique perspective, drawn from professional experience, to the history of magnetic recording applications. Their key insights shed light on how magnetic recording triumphed over all competing technologies and revolutionized the music, radio, television, and computer industries. They also show how these developments offer opportunities for future applications. Magnetic Recording features 116 illustrations, including 92 photographs of historic magnetic recording machines and their inventors. |
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Page 56
... tion at the Berlin exhibition that summer of 1935 ( Fig . 5-7 ) . People were amazed to be able to hear their voices an instant after recording . The demonstra- tion was overshadowed , however , by a fire midway through the show that de ...
... tion at the Berlin exhibition that summer of 1935 ( Fig . 5-7 ) . People were amazed to be able to hear their voices an instant after recording . The demonstra- tion was overshadowed , however , by a fire midway through the show that de ...
Page 86
... tion . The tape was tensioned by the forward motion of the tape pulling against the reel motor torque . Most professional recorders to follow the Model 200 used this technique . The use of three separate motors enabled the tape motion ...
... tion . The tape was tensioned by the forward motion of the tape pulling against the reel motor torque . Most professional recorders to follow the Model 200 used this technique . The use of three separate motors enabled the tape motion ...
Page 263
... tion system dubbed " adaptive cross parity . " This was a group coding format that buffered over a hundred bits to give essentially 2 - track error correction and 3 - track error detection . The resulting reliability at the 19 kb / in ...
... tion system dubbed " adaptive cross parity . " This was a group coding format that buffered over a hundred bits to give essentially 2 - track error correction and 3 - track error detection . The resulting reliability at the 19 kb / in ...
Contents
AUDIO RECORDING | 6 |
The Telegraphone | 15 |
Steel Tape and Wire Recorders | 30 |
Copyright | |
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Magnetic Recording: The First 100 Years Eric D. Daniel,C. Denis Mee,Mark H. Clark Limited preview - 1998 |
Common terms and phrases
ac bias Ampex analog applications areal density b/in bandwidth BASF bit density broadcast Brush capacity capstan cartridge coating color compact cassette consumer Corporation cost Courtesy data rate data recording data storage developed device diameter digital recording digital video recording disk drive diskette early electronic engineers equipment error Figure film frequency German helical-scan improved inches industry instrumentation recorder Jack Mullin Ludwigshafen machine magnetic disk magnetic drum magnetic recording magnetic tape Magnetophon manufacturers mechanism memory Model modulation operation oxide Panasonic particles patent performance personal computer phonograph playback Poulsen prerecorded production quadruplex radio recording format recording heads recording medium recording system recording technology reel rotating SMPTE Sony sound Soundmirror standard stored studio surface tape drive tape speed Telegraphone telephone television tion track United video cassette recorder video signal video tape recorder wire recorders