Hi Magnus,
Thanks for the link but as I said, this is a field that is still under 
researched with a lot of misinformation out there especially on the less 
academic or lab side of things.

I understand this stuff and the processes but I am here to help other people 
understand and acquire these skills for the future.

The thing is, if he has custom equipment for it he may have also documented a 
reliable workflow that could be used in smaller operations, at home setups, etc.

I'm looking to further disseminate information as well as continue the research 
outside of corporate interests. Making sure knowledge is handed off and widely 
available, including in print form.

So while your helping spirit is definitely appreciated, as a professional audio 
engineer I'm explaining the state of things outside of lab preservation. Not to 
mention, you can read posts online by professionals even talking trash on the 
stuff linked. This is exactly how I found out about Chuck years ago.

I'm chiming in here because I'm specifically interested in the knowledge Chuck 
collected, preserving any techniques he hammered into followable steps or 
additional knowledge not spread, and to share in more ways for others that 
didn't liaten or haven't figured it out yet.

He was someone who knew a lot of tricks and helped a lot of people. 

Still getting used to the format of this place and apologize of this double 
posted.

And since this is somewhat my introduction for everyone else, I want to also 
say Hello. I am a Cherokee from the Nation in Oklahoma living off-Rez right 
now. Although I mentioned audio engineer, I mean it in a very Classical sense 
having been trained by some old school guys in Fresno and learning a lot about 
electrical engineering as part of that. Aside from Joe Roizen, I also am 
relayed to Bill Hickey Jr., who taught me much of what I know about Data on 
Tape, sending me down this path being himself one of the foremost specialists 
on data as sound, data pn tape, etc. Which more specifically Data Storage is my 
tape interest while not just specifically analog signals or audio recording. 

I also work in language preservation and translation of Cherokee. 
So I hope all that sort of helps paint why I'm also interested in non-localized 
information storage or even really in-league with academia as much as 
archivists, utilitarian, and Indigenous folks surviving with repurposed junk or 
recovering nearly-lost history.

- Lichen

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