Old manual got wet

From: Feldman, Robert <Robert_Feldman_at_jdedwards.com>
Date: Wed Sep 3 12:54:00 2003

Freeze drying can be used, but requires significant equipment. Look at pages 13-17 of
http://www.mcfoa.org/DisasterPlan.pdf


Wet books can also be frozen simply to prevent further damage (such as mildew) and to give time to treat the books one by one: freezing locks up the water so it can't do more damage as a liquid. See for example:
http://aic.stanford.edu/conspec/bpg/annual/v05/bp05-21.html

Once the book has dried out, there is not much that can be simply done to repair the damage.

Bob

-----Original Message-----
From: Vintage Computer Festival [mailto:vcf_at_siconic.com]
Sent: Wednesday, September 03, 2003 11:57 AM
To: Classic Computers Mailing List
Subject: Re: Old manual got wet


On Tue, 2 Sep 2003, emanuel stiebler wrote:

> here is the problem:
> I have an old manual which spent some time in water, and now after it
> dried out, I have more or less just a piece of wood :(
> So, how do you guys deal with something like that ? Put it in water
> again, and try to remove page after page ?
> Any better ideas ?

I believe folks have suggested freeze drying in the past? It would
probably be useful to check with some experienced librarians on this.

-- 
Sellam Ismail                                        Vintage Computer Festival
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger                http://www.vintage.org
[ Old computing resources for business || Buy/Sell/Trade Vintage Computers   ]
[ and academia at www.VintageTech.com  || at http://marketplace.vintage.org  ]
Received on Wed Sep 03 2003 - 12:54:00 BST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Fri Oct 10 2014 - 23:36:25 BST