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  1. The recordings were produced on as many as nine Sony TC-800B machines using very thin 0.5 mil (12.7 μm) tape at the slow speed of 15 ⁄ 16 inch (24 mm) per second. [8] The tapes contain about 3,700 hours of conversation.

  2. Between February 16, 1971 and July 18, 1973 Richard Nixon secretly recorded roughly 3,700 hours of conversations and meetings in five different locations.

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  4. Jan 31, 2010 · Nixon's sound-activated recording system included a Sony 800 and an Uher 5000, logging 3,400 hours of discussion during the two years it was active. It wasn't until after the Nixon Administration that the public learned about the combined 5,000 hours of secretly recorded conversations from all six administrations.

  5. Executive Office Building: Audiotapes 348-448. Oval Office: Audiotapes 746-950. Tapes will be added as the National Archives continues its digitization project. For Tapes still pending online release, contact the Nixon Library to explore copies. White House Telephone - Audiotape 001 to Audiotape 046 - Phone Conversations.

  6. Between February 1971 and July 1973, President Richard Nixon secretly recorded 3,700 hours of his phone calls and meetings across the executive offices. Currently, approximately 3,000 hours of these tapes have been declassified, released, and made available to the public.

  7. Between February 1971 and July 1973, President Richard Nixon secretly recorded 3,700 hours of his phone calls and meetings across the executive offices. These recordings played a leading role in the resignation of our 37th president on August 9, 1974.

  8. Aug 25, 2023 · About sixty hours of Richard Nixon's White House tapes will be opened by the National Archives sometime in 1989. This is the first segment of the tapes to be opened, other than the twelve and a half hours of recordings that were entered into evidence in U.S. v. Connally and U.S. v. Mitchell, et al. —the so-called Milk Fund and Watergate trials.

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