Gen X, this is your time to shine.
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Gen X, this is your time to shine. My friend has spilled a cup of tea (containing dairy milk) on their partner's limited edition Bob Vylan cassette, of which there are apparently only 200 in existence. I am providing desiccant beads, but is there anything else that needs to be done and will the cassette still play?
@afewbugs
Have you tried installing linux? -
@afewbugs
Have you tried installing linux?@jamesb I actually cackled out loud at this
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@afewbugs ⬆️ perhaps also a question to #makers and #repair or @Maker_of_Things
@NatureMC @afewbugs
Ugh, messy, and fiddly.Hopefully it is a cassette that can be opened up.
I would carefully unspool the tape so that it can be washed and respooled after the cassette insides have been cleaned.
If you have a sacrificial cassette, you can transfer the wet tape, while it is still tightly wound, to a spare case, while the original is being cleaned.
You can then pull out the tape in manageable lengths to wash, dry, and respool, before moving onto the next section.
When it is cleaned, it can be put back in the original case.
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Gen X, this is your time to shine. My friend has spilled a cup of tea (containing dairy milk) on their partner's limited edition Bob Vylan cassette, of which there are apparently only 200 in existence. I am providing desiccant beads, but is there anything else that needs to be done and will the cassette still play?
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@jamesb I actually cackled out loud at this
@afewbugs
The fediverse is nothing but predictable...
Personally I'd give the tape an IPA bath or two, followed by distilled water to try and get rid of the tea residue. It shouldn't affect the sound itself but it might gum up the tape and mechanism. -
@afewbugs
The fediverse is nothing but predictable...
Personally I'd give the tape an IPA bath or two, followed by distilled water to try and get rid of the tea residue. It shouldn't affect the sound itself but it might gum up the tape and mechanism.@jamesb the tape has now been briefly rinsed and put in a Tupperware full of desiccant beads overnight. It's in the hands of the gods now
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@jamesb the tape has now been briefly rinsed and put in a Tupperware full of desiccant beads overnight. It's in the hands of the gods now
@afewbugs
Got an air fryer? -
Gen X, this is your time to shine. My friend has spilled a cup of tea (containing dairy milk) on their partner's limited edition Bob Vylan cassette, of which there are apparently only 200 in existence. I am providing desiccant beads, but is there anything else that needs to be done and will the cassette still play?
@afewbugs 1. *Don’t* put in in a car cassette player. They are guaranteed to eat any tape you care about and will require disassembly.
2. Any player is likely to eat any tape that has even a tiny speck of anything sticky. Cleaning required first.
3. If you’re lucky, the liquid didn’t enter the shell. If it did, I see others described transferring it to a clean housing.
4. The exposed bit of tape can be gently extracted and cleaned with distilled water and or isopropyl alcohol. Rewinding is accomplished with the proverbial pencil.
5. Some old tapes begin to lose their rust. There are literal baking procedures described online, but this is beyond my expertise. If it’s shedding dust, you really need an experienced archivist. -
@afewbugs
Got an air fryer?@jamesb no I'm going to deep fry it, air fryers just blow the batter off
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@jamesb no I'm going to deep fry it, air fryers just blow the batter off
@afewbugs
Heh.
<MansplainingMode:On>
Some air fryers have a low temperature dehydration setting. I use it for drying 3d printing filament (don't tell my wife) but I imagine it would work well for this use case as well.
<MansplainingMode:Off> -
@jamesb no I'm going to deep fry it, air fryers just blow the batter off
@afewbugs
I only told you to blow the bloody damp off. -
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