by Rob-NYC »
Thu May 10, 2012 7:38 am
Oh heavens no. but I did rebuild two of those in spring 1986 and I hope I added a fuse:-)
I guess the U-L approval was based on the transformer burning out and not causing a fire.
On the other extreme, while I was in school I worked at an A-V vendor that had dealings with a co. called Dolphin Productions. They where one of only about three shops in No America that produced Scanimation. Essentially, any TV net ID or program intro for news and movies from the late '60- early 80's was produced by one of these facilities.
It was located on east 80th st a block away from where I live so easy to drop by even w/out having business there.
The process was true Rube Goldberg using two large helical scan VTRs and a goofy set up of monitors, sync and chroma generators and a several oscillators and monochrome cameras..
The problem they ran into was getting the thing certified as UL for insurance and to be able use it in a place of business because there hadn't been a "destructive test" done.
This was an assemblage of equipment that cost upwards of a half-million dollars in the late 60's and no one was going to deliberately burn it up to see what would happen.
Eventually the lawyers pressured the inspectors to accept the agglomerated approvals of each component as adequate for coverage.
I found this on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGF0Okaee1oAlso, people restore quad VTRs too:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IFWY2JzrrM4 This was the sort of machine in studios when I was a kid.
Not as crazy as it seems since there are literally hundreds of thousands of hours on quad videotape and most stations no longer keep much in the way of legacy equipment to retrieve the material, so one might have a small, profitable business digitizing and archiving old Captain Kangaroo ep's

Rob
"If we believe absurdities, we shall commit atrocities" -- Voltaire