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75,034 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

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Tom Glenwright profil fotoğrafı
Tom Glenwright2 yıl önce

Ha! We had to use one of those for some BBC archive stuff out a couple of years back, didn’t have a clue how it worked!

Stephanie Hirst profil fotoğrafı
Stephanie Hirst2 yıl önce

Ah!! Revox PR99 (ASC version) nerd knowledge coming in handy there!!

Richard Allinson💙 profil fotoğrafı
Richard Allinson💙2 yıl önce

Full Nerd…90 degree edits only

Stephanie Hirst profil fotoğrafı
Stephanie Hirst2 yıl önce

Oh yes! Straight cut! 💥

Anna King profil fotoğrafı
Anna King2 yıl önce

Get me a Chinagraph and a blade- I’ll show ‘em!

Stephanie Hirst profil fotoğrafı
Stephanie Hirst2 yıl önce

Haha!! It’s a skill we never forget!!

John Gelson 🚍📻🇺🇦 profil fotoğrafı
John Gelson 🚍📻🇺🇦2 yıl önce

I put many a long shift in editing packages on a Studer A807 just like that ... and in my first radio job in 1992-94, when I turned a package around daily for an all-speech lunchtime show, I had the razor wounds to show for it! 😏

DOMINIC KING profil fotoğrafı
DOMINIC KING2 yıl önce

Happy memories! I was just talking to someone about the ‘joy’ of cutting tape and using the yellow pencil!

Andy Finney (delverie.bsky.social) profil fotoğrafı
Andy Finney (delverie.bsky.social)2 yıl önce

@kev_tape The Studer C37 tape machine had electrically operated scissors for editing. Find your spot as usual, move the tape on a set amount (no chinagraph required) and press the button. Story goes one went rogue during transmission and chopped up the tape! Scissors were then disabled!

Nigel Turner profil fotoğrafı
Nigel Turner2 yıl önce

I spent hours, editing on reel to reel machines in those days and regularly spliced more then tape! Bulk erasing could be fun too, especially if I forgot to take off my watch…. 😔

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