All magnetic tape (be it for audio, video or data storage) is made the same way, a slurry is deposited onto a substrate in a thin layer, this slurry then solvent welds to the the substrate so the resultant stripe becomes physically fused with the substrate. After the paste is applied the substrate is passed over a strong magnet which aligns all the magnetic particles in the paste to the correct orientation (so it can be recorded upon), it then dries and cures while being passed through chrome rollers which flatten and smooth the surface to the correct surface finish.
So whether an 8mm film has the stripe directly applied via paste or laminated with a thin strip of tape, that tape was too made with a magnetic paste (so to speak). There's just an extra step or two along the way. When people refer to 'bad' paste they mean Derann's grey paste stripe, but the earlier brown stripe also had it's fair share of problems.
Reading the old literature it looks like the grey paste was some sort of 2-part resin which gave the level of adhesion required, but also ended up being thicker than previous mixes. It would also 'go off' (ie get thicker, start to harden) during striping, limiting the amount of film that could be striped at a time to a few thousand feet before the machine had to be cleaned and stripped. I would imagine the actual stripe material itself is no more abrasive than other magnetic stripes, but its uneven rougher surface will accelerate wear. Think of lower grit sandpaper vs high grit.
So whether an 8mm film has the stripe directly applied via paste or laminated with a thin strip of tape, that tape was too made with a magnetic paste (so to speak). There's just an extra step or two along the way. When people refer to 'bad' paste they mean Derann's grey paste stripe, but the earlier brown stripe also had it's fair share of problems.
Reading the old literature it looks like the grey paste was some sort of 2-part resin which gave the level of adhesion required, but also ended up being thicker than previous mixes. It would also 'go off' (ie get thicker, start to harden) during striping, limiting the amount of film that could be striped at a time to a few thousand feet before the machine had to be cleaned and stripped. I would imagine the actual stripe material itself is no more abrasive than other magnetic stripes, but its uneven rougher surface will accelerate wear. Think of lower grit sandpaper vs high grit.
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