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RECORDING PROGRAMMES.—A recording room in the 8.8.C.’s auxiliary studios at Maida Vale, London in which many of the Empire programmes are electrically recorded. The engineer on the right is adjusting a machine, in which the programme is recorded magnetically on steel tape wound from the left-hand spool on to the right-hand spool through a recording head. through the sounaproof window another engineer can be seen controlling the volume of a programme and checking the quality as it is recorded. On the left are the programme amplifiers and switching equipment —Courtesy 8.8. C.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19380226.2.20.10.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 22893, 26 February 1938, Page 4

Word Count
92

RECORDING PROGRAMMES.—A recording room in the B.B.C.’s auxiliary studios at Maida Vale, London in which many of the Empire programmes are electrically recorded. The engineer on the right is adjusting a machine, in which the programme is recorded magnetically on steel tape wound from the left-hand spool on to the right-hand spool through a recording head. through the sounaproof window another engineer can be seen controlling the volume of a programme and checking the quality as it is recorded. On the left are the programme amplifiers and switching equipment —Courtesy B.B.C. Evening Star, Issue 22893, 26 February 1938, Page 4

RECORDING PROGRAMMES.—A recording room in the B.B.C.’s auxiliary studios at Maida Vale, London in which many of the Empire programmes are electrically recorded. The engineer on the right is adjusting a machine, in which the programme is recorded magnetically on steel tape wound from the left-hand spool on to the right-hand spool through a recording head. through the sounaproof window another engineer can be seen controlling the volume of a programme and checking the quality as it is recorded. On the left are the programme amplifiers and switching equipment —Courtesy B.B.C. Evening Star, Issue 22893, 26 February 1938, Page 4