Yes, I have a 1" Type-C machine. I can deliver on DV or either MJPEG or uncompressed 4:2:2 on hard drive. My contact info is in my profile, just click on my name. I've got a major project going on at the moment and I'll be on-location through Sunday, so I might not get back to you immediately.
"Don't forget to consider cleaning/baking the tapes before transferring."
Anf if they need baking DO NOT attempt to clean them before you bake them. In fact we've found cleaning them doesn't help at all and can do a lot of harm.
For irreplaceable material, this is definitely a job for experts.
There are definitely cases where cleaning is needed be able to read the tapes, but there are different kinds of cleaning depending on the condition of the tapes.
We're looking to modify our Rekoteks so they're not Wreck A Techs!
The tape scrappers should never be used on old tapes. After baking we suffer the head clogs rather than damage the tapes. We're looking to add vacuum cleaners to our 1" and more so our 2" machines to speed up the process due to cost constraints. We've been shipped pallet loads of 2" tapes from overseas that none of the experts could get footage off. The first 10 minutes of the trial tape was pretty much destroyed by idiots.
The group I work with has now about one of every 1" and 2" VTRs ever made including Merlin 1" machines. Unfortunately they're just about all PAL although we might have one 1" NTSC machine somewhere. Cost of freight would suggest that finding someone on the same continent would be more economical.
One tip I've picked up from an old audio hand for sticky tape is to lubricate the tape with silicon oil ( Mr Sheen works well). There was at least one 1/4" audio deck made with a lubricator fitted for this purpose. We haven't been game enough to try this with videotape as yet. Baking in our purpose built ovens is working very well. Keeping those old quad VTRs going and affording the space for them is a challenge. Even finding a suitable air compressor that'd survive was difficult.