I work at a state agency that defends death row inmates. One of our cases
involves a police broadcast tape from the early-mid 1980s. It logs a 12-
or 24-hour period of police-band communications, on 12 or 16 separate
tracks (separate broadcast channels?). It is vital that we find out what
is on this tape. However, it is an old-fashioned reel-to-reel tape, and
we have no way of listening to it. The tape box is 11" x 11" x 1.5"
thick, and it says, "Magnasync/Moviola Corporation -- Logging Audio
Communications Tape". Does anybody out there know how we can find or
modify equipment that will enable us to listen to this tape? The magnetic
tape itself is very wide -- as wide or wider than a regular VHS video
tape. This is a capital case, and any help you can offer would be greatly
appreciated.
A radio station just might have something kicking around that will play it.
Call and ask for the Production Manager.
ZW
"blinkbox" <dholzner@hcrc.ca.gov> wrote in message
news:5ff8dfd9438af3fce899629f2753e7f1@localhost.talkaboutaudio.com...
> I work at a state agency that defends death row inmates. One of our cases
> involves a police broadcast tape from the early-mid 1980s. It logs a 12-
> or 24-hour period of police-band communications, on 12 or 16 separate
> tracks (separate broadcast channels?). It is vital that we find out what
> is on this tape. However, it is an old-fashioned reel-to-reel tape, and
> we have no way of listening to it. The tape box is 11" x 11" x 1.5"
> thick, and it says, "Magnasync/Moviola Corporation -- Logging Audio
> Communications Tape". Does anybody out there know how we can find or
> modify equipment that will enable us to listen to this tape? The magnetic
> tape itself is very wide -- as wide or wider than a regular VHS video
> tape. This is a capital case, and any help you can offer would be greatly
> appreciated.
>
"blinkbox" wrote ...
>I work at a state agency that defends death row inmates. One of our
>cases
> involves a police broadcast tape from the early-mid 1980s. It logs a
> 12-
> or 24-hour period of police-band communications, on 12 or 16 separate
> tracks (separate broadcast channels?). It is vital that we find out
> what
> is on this tape. However, it is an old-fashioned reel-to-reel tape,
> and
> we have no way of listening to it. The tape box is 11" x 11" x 1.5"
> thick, and it says, "Magnasync/Moviola Corporation -- Logging Audio
> Communications Tape". Does anybody out there know how we can find or
> modify equipment that will enable us to listen to this tape? The
> magnetic
> tape itself is very wide -- as wide or wider than a regular VHS video
> tape. This is a capital case, and any help you can offer would be
> greatly
> appreciated.
1) www.magnasync.com They are still a major player in that business
and I'd be somewhat surprised if they couldn't just play back the tape
or recommend the most convienent location that could help you.
2) There are experts who specialize in forensic audio engineering. They
would either have the equipment or have access/contacts to it. They are
likely known within the legal community.
3) Scott Dorsey over in news:rec.audio.pro may also have some insight
into recovery of older reel-to-reel audio tapes. His email address is
listed as: kludge (at) panix.com
Those tapes are likely recorded in a track configuration and tape speed
that are unique to the communications logging application. They are
probably not playable on standard audio production equipment.
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