Hi Steve:
Thanks for your response. I agree with what you said above. It seems the fastest growing group of analog R2R machine fans are the audiophiles whereas there are only handful of pro archivists and tape transfer people who still use master recorders in regular bases. If the goal of the List is to preserve these fine machines for the future generation, non-pro audiophiles and DIYers should be encouraged to participate in the discussions. Just my two cents.
On the other hand, I should have taken a picture of an A820 loaded in a Toyota Prius for a ride from my work to home this afternoon. It probably was the first and maybe the last a 200 lbs Studer A820 was transported in a such a small vehicle. The back hatch was not closed all the way but it made home without an incident.
All the other Studers I have collected so far required some work to get them to work properly. But the A820 is performing flawlessly from the moment I checked the cards and turned the power on for the first time. The VU meters needed the light bulbs that I already had them on hand for A810 spares. Even all the pushbutton T5.5 lamps were all good. The recorder is not perfect cosmetically but it is in excellent condition. I am also happy to learn all the audio cards in A820 are the same as the ones for A810.
In looking further into the ceramic guides, I realized my A820 with SN: 1131 already has the roller tape guide described in the manual as the Scrape Flutter Roller located left of the record head. The ceramic guide right of the repro head turned out to be the Tape Lifter that pushes the tape away from the repro head during spooling. The last cermic guide positioned right of the capstan was a dummy head where the time code head would have gone.
Thus, I have answered my question...
It will be interesting to align, adjust, and bias the A820 to the factory spec and compare its performance to A80RC, A810, A807, and the Sony APR5003 in due time.
Ki
PS: Re-read Eric's original post on SHR headblock. I'd like to see a photo of the headblock to ease my mind but it seems in addition to removing the erase head, record head and moving the repro head to where record head used be (my guess), the mode must have included replacing the cermic tape lifter with a roller (it does touch tape during play), and also removing the dummy timecode head would be a part of the physical changes.