Rca Victor records manufacturing process 1942 part 2



Uploaded by: yopascualin
Video Description:
1942 "Command Performance" video about records manufacturing process.


Tags for this video: 1942 cutting disco fabricacion grabacion manufacturing pressing process rca record victor

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This record was ... ( 11 months ago by HomeoftheGoodGuys)
This record was pressed by a women in a machine. This was before the records were pressed into a machine and automatically send it into the slot for manufacturing.
It was a very ... ( 7 months ago by princette)
It was a very labour intensive process. And pobably quite dangerous with those chemicals, there must have been a few mishaps too, as shellac was very fragile
God, imagine having ... ( 6 months ago by derpenstein)
God, imagine having to work there. It would crush my soul.
Those slide ... ( 6 months ago by roguedog60)
Those slide changers (at the end) must have murder on fragile shellac records.
The Camden plant is long gone now.
That was an intense ... ( 5 months ago by bertskoi)
That was an intense record changer @ the end. It had to have been an RCA turntable. Did it just DUMP the records out or was there another arm that placed them in a stack of some kind underneath the turntable, I wonder... oh well thanks for posting this.
record changer make ... ( 5 months ago by ToastmachineIdiot)
record changer make record go WHAM! lol! Man, and those 78's can be brittle little things!
Before my time, so ... ( 5 months ago by BernardFeltzer)
Before my time, so I have a question. Are those records the old brittle ones that break easily ? What is the difference between these and records I bought in the 1960's vinyl ?
Yes, those these ... ( 5 months ago by yopascualin)
Yes, those these are the famous 78rpm fragile records. The difference is the pressing material. The vinyl is flexible so the shellack records are rigid and brittle.
Actually, the ... ( 4 months ago by m2esectr)
Actually, the compartment the record falls into is profiled and padded. The inside of the drawer is shaped to meet the round edge of the record so that the impact is distributed over a wide area. Combined with a thick velvet padding, that makes so that the record doesn't break.
What a job! for ... ( 4 months ago by LHUPA)
What a job! for manufacturing these records! According to this video, this plant seems to be dirty and dangerous with all secret chemicals used inside! Vinyl records manufacturing seem to be less painful!
facinating process. ... ( 3 months ago by southjk)
facinating process..thanks for posting
Array ( 2 months ago by dboy122660)
yeah.
And I thought ALL women in
the '40s were just housewives!!
:P
Wouldnt all those ... ( 2 months ago by danielgosson)
Wouldnt all those layers plated onto the master dull the sound a bit, or make the grooves a little fatter?
Wow. Someone ... ( 1 month ago by Trance88)
Wow. Someone actually sat and listened to the records before they are packaged!!
I have a bunch od ... ( 1 month ago by AMG93)
I have a bunch od 78's and they're all in great condition, I don't think their brittle at all.
Pure Genius. ... ( 1 month ago by djozmo)
Pure Genius. Imagine how fun it must have been to selecta record and put it on the player back in the day...music had allot more respect back in the day.
Man,what a process! ... ( 2 weeks ago by BDWong)
Man,what a process! Bet all those secret chemicals had their effect! I'm told that before they developed the mother/stamper process, they could anly get a certain number of records out of a master, then the artist had to try and recreate the performance. A while back my wife asked why it took them so long (1906-1908?) to figure out you could have music on both sides of a record. Nobody considered it I guess. Hey, how come CDs only have one side now?!? At least there are some 2 sided DVDs.
I'm sure that the ... ( 4 days ago by Watcher3223)
I'm sure that the test listeners didn't listen to every single record from every single yield. They likely listened to sample records taken from each yield. Usually, a defective sample record may reveal a problem in the entire yield that the defective record was taken from. A bad sample may prompt closer scrutiny of the yield that it came from and, very possibly, rejection of the entire yield as well as locating and correcting the problem where ever it may be in the manufacturing process.
CDs have one side ... ( 4 days ago by Watcher3223)
CDs have one side because that's all you need for a typical album and it simplifies manufacturing; dual-sided discs can be more complex to craft, such as DVD-18 which is dual-sided with each side being RSDL or Reverse Spiral Dual Layer. Maximum duration for a redbook CD is around 80 minutes while the LP may yield around 20 minutes or more for each side, depending on how the grooves are cut. But, when cutting vinyl, you must balance time with quality; more time will cost you in sound quality.



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