Dear reader: If you have any old (70s-80s) Sesame Street episodes (taped from PBS, NOT from Noggin) then I'm always eager to strike up a VHS/DVD trade with you. Feel free to message me for a list of what I have to offer. My collection consists of over 200 classic episodes, so I may or may not already have what you're offering me. We'll see ...
If you don't have anything to offer me, you can always buy me DVDs from my wish list (link also provided upon request).
PS. PLEASE DO NOT ASK ME WHAT TO POST. I get extremely annoyed when people comment on my videos asking for the clip that comes before/after it. I am also annoyed by requests for funding credits (seriously, who cares about those?).
PPS. If you like my videos, you can download them using keepvid.com, vixy.net or mediaconverter.org. Get 'em while they're hot. But remember, RU-vid is no substitute for the real thing,
Dude this is the greatest thing I have ever seen in my life. I myself have an ever growing collection of VHS tapes that have no labels. What make mine worse was I had this wild idea that buying up old shoulder boulder vhs home video cameras and using them to film all the way up into the late 20teens when i finally no longer could find new blank tapes. lmfao all the sticky stuff on the labels wore out and i cat get rid of the tapes because my childrens first steps on on some of those tapes as well as my great grand parents telling stories from the late 1800s to make it worse i have 100 of un labled cassette tapes and from when i was a little kid and my dad was a ham radio operator i have a few dozen unlabled 8 tracks he made when i was a babby. my grandpa left me his old real to real audio recorder and stacks of reels he made as a police officer and a soldiere post ww2. you are a true warrior actually gettig around to going thru your collection. i foulkd a company that would digitize for me but it would run 25$ an hour of footage plus an y extra time they had to repair any stuck reels and such. Hats off to you man. subscribed
oh and my grandmothers great uncle was in dealy plaza when kennedy was shot and it is possible one of the dozen video reel to reels my have been filmed that day and he was on the corner before the last turn facing the book depository. he without a doubt filmed that day but some of his collection was lost in the mid 70s and i personally have not seen anything that looks filmed that day in the small amount i have but they are so delecate i have not fully examined them until they can be properly copied just as a precaution. I know the importance of that film and i do at least have some help with proper archival storage. Part of my delay was due to spending the last 10 years digitizeing the family photos dating back to the civiil war. sorry about so many misspellings i just realized my auto check was turned off.
Looks like it may be an IEC 320 C1? It is hard to tell from the angle if there is any kind of relief or plastic moulding around the socket or if it is just a straight longs all around. Might be a C3, with the space to orient the cord in both directions? Either way, measuring the dimensions with a caliper should let you confirm something that fits.
After a quick Google. "The C9 is mostly used on audio equipment, including synthesisers, reel-to-reel tape machines, hifis, turntables etc. High-quality vintage sound equipment is long-lasting so the connector is still in demand. Another reasonably common use is in sewing machines and knitting machines. Manufacturers known to have used the IEC C9 are Akai, Marantz, Revox, Roland, Singer, Tandberg, and Telefunken." The corresponding appliance inlet is the C10.
You need an AC cord that fits... That's all. There are probably many modern small appliances that use a cord like that. The other DC power would need a specific converter. There should be a label for the Volts DC requirement. I would not use the tape cleaner option. Beta tapes would be around 40 years old, and one playback would be damaging enough. Magnetic tape doesn't last forever.
I’ve seen those connectors on a few devices. They look similar to IEC C7 but with squarer corners. They are a fairly common type of connector but I don’t know what it’s called. You may be able to squash an IEC C7 plug in there, but I have a feeling I’ve tried this before and it wouldn’t fit. Can you not just use the DC power input with a suitable power supply instead?
@@MuppetDudeWell yeah, I just want to chat with fans like you and Shane if you’re comfortable or not. But really, are you from Norway or are you American?
@@MuppetDudeSomeone on Muppet Central said you were a “pen pal” of them I don’t know if they meant a different country you were from or if it was that Norwegian clip on your channel. That’s why I think
Hi, sawing. You haven't posted any videos for a while. How have you been? I used to watch all those Sesame Street videos that you posted on here years ago.
I remember watching those videos when I was 5 or 6 when my mom led me her iPhone 4 and started watching Sesame Street as a toddler. Some of the sesame steeet videos I watched from sawing videos. Those were the good old days
I find it really insulting that people keep people they hate, presidents they hate, or presidential administrations they hate to 9/11. Fuck those people who insult those who died in 9/11.
Hey there Ray Anthony. It was great to have met you. You suggested 3D art, and this gave me a new scope to look through for branding. Thank you so much. New beginnings and so forth!