Another tip, you can buy pre-recorded commercial tapes at your local record store typically very cheap, and look for the ones that are on chrome tape, put tape over the 2 knock outs at the top of the shell and now you can record over it. And now you got yourself a very inexpensive chrome tape.
@maxtrue9744 Жыл бұрын
Made with a very cheap shell and the cheapest tape. The shell is what controls wow and flutter. The tape controls the frequency response and noise. No prerecorded tape is as good as a TDK SA.
@pjisonline11 ай бұрын
And what about the noches in the cassette housing? In the commercial tapes the holes for Chrome tape are not there.
@sempertern7 ай бұрын
pre-recorded tapes have lots of oxide on them, to make sure they never lose the original song. so you're left with a cassette that will hardly erase and will ruin your heads faster
@ArturArocha Жыл бұрын
I do not like noise reductions, I think that a deck that is right calibrated and updated can handle Type 1s with no problem and with extreme low noise, and good high frequency responce.
@anadialog Жыл бұрын
Can't disagree
@-elijahriggs-2 жыл бұрын
Dude, I watched your channel a lot, but this video is seriously great. I'm 41, I had tapes. I knew about demag, etc, but a lot of this is VERY helpful. I had already ordered type 1, then realized I care about fidelity too much and ordered type 2. This video made me realize I made the right choice. The output voltage info is great. I now know it's something to look at. I've wanted to make a mixtape for a girl for a long time and I want to it reflect my love of fidelity.
@ACommenterOnYouTube3 жыл бұрын
Other than the point of cassette's or their purpose, i really like the physical touch and feel and the sounds the cassette makes when you handle it. Its has that unique sound to it that a cd or record simply does not have. When you handle it, you can hear the reels inside shift and move, that sound is like no other.
@h.markhorton81882 жыл бұрын
Tight righto
@phatsmitty7 күн бұрын
Very nice job of sharing a ton of information into this 19 minutes. If done right, there is very good sound to be had at 1 & 7/8 inches per second. I just had my son load and play a cassette today ... he picked UB40 🙂 Also I played a mix tape on the reel deck
@YQN214926 күн бұрын
In case you wanna come back here for a specific tip: 03:40 - New & NOS cassettes 07:30 - Use your decks 08:10 - Japanese tapes with Japanese decks 09:28 - Clean your decks 10:32 - Demagnetize your heads 11:03 - Buy serviced decks or service them 11:55 - Check your pinch roller if jamming 12:33 - Record also high-res digital sources 13:21 - Match output/input sensitivity & impedance 15:06 - Don't use full output level on tape decks 15:46 - Noise reduction on Type I 16:33 - Re-lube your cassettes 17:28 - Play cassettes where you recorded them 18:31 - Look for calibrating decks
@markmiwurdz2023 жыл бұрын
Just a couple of tips that have helped me when using cassette tapes over the years. When you first open a new tape, I always fast forward the tape through side A and then side B. This "aligns" the tape to your machine. Do this if you use the same cassettes on your home player and in the car. And when recording, always wind on the leader to the start of the actual tape with a pencil. Then when you release the pause button to start record/play, you do not lose the start of your recording.
@darinb.32733 жыл бұрын
1st The tape pack is EXTREMELY smooth in an unused (new) cassette the tape won't vary as it is unwound from the supply reel nearly as much following the FF rewind technique you mentioned 2ndly for storage in the industry the engineers from what I understand ALWAYS left the tail out (at the end of the recording) and it was done in play so the tape pack was absolutely smooth. 3rdly the leader in modern cassettes of quality had a built in nonabrasive head cleaner it also served as a 5 second cue and then the actual tape would be available, however this transition could potentially case distortion at the very beginning of the tape all commercially recorded cassettes ALWAYS let the actual tape itself run for 4 to 5 seconds before the recording started as per the tape had a chance to run properly (align itself for smooth sound at the start this followed into the commercially recorded video tape as well 30 seconds or so for the duplication machines to get the tape properly running through the machine. It yielded far better results so that's as I understand why the blank space on cassettes and video tape.
@jesserussell7242 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Mark I will definitely keep those tips in mind and Europe in 1984 I love cassettes there’s something wonderful about recording on a cassette and testing it to see if it works on a specific deck and they have such amazing sounds what cassettes do you recommend and what length? The two cassettes I have right now are Maxwells and TDK. I have a mixture of 90 minute concert and 120 minute ones.
@markmiwurdz2248 Жыл бұрын
@jesserussell7242. Apologies for the late reply. TDK are IMHO definitely the best brand. I always liked their ‘AD’ specification. My recordings always sounded good on my Aiwa tape decks and in the car without going to Chrome or Metal spec. And you could really push the signal going onto the AD tape to the limit, especially for playback in the car. I recorded a tape for a friend who had an in -car graphic equaliser with LED VU meters. When he played my recording on AD tape, the meters “peaked” constantly but without distortion! I can remember buying TDK AD tapes with 80 minutes running time to fit with the full time on a CD. And back in the last century I am sure I bought TDK AD - 46 tapes which were equal to the playing time of the average LP vinyl disc. I would avoid 120 minute cassettes because the tape has got to be thinner to fit in the standard shell casing. So they would be prone to problems. Maxell are also a good brand. Hope this helps you in your journey into the world of ferric oxide tape! Stay safe and well.
@byronrichards30016 ай бұрын
Nice rundown on tapes. I never knew the subject ran this deep.your knowledge and experience is very much appreciated. Keep informing the people...
@Jvavolerpareil3 жыл бұрын
Oh ! What an amazing video ! I completely agree with all you say. I used to work for a high end hi-fi store in Montreal. in the 90's. We where authorized Nakamichi service center. I can say that those decks are not only sounding great, but they are also very reliable. The record/playback heads last forever (or almost). I got a BS-150 and a CR-7 (yes, the one with auto calibrate). I LOVE then. I'm not using then since years, but they are NOT for sale ! I also like Thanberg close dual capstan model that I had to service once in my career. Not easy to repair, but sound absolutely fantastic.
@artl52 Жыл бұрын
Boy oh boy! I just unearthed a cassette from my basement - The Eagles, recorded on Maxell UD XL II in December 1978 off of record. The deck used to record the tape was a Kyocera D-801 (long gone) and the tape has not been played in a decade at least. Playing it now on a Luxman K-120 2-head deck. WoW!! It sounds fantastic. And extremely little if no noise between tracks. You are absolutely correct - use great tape, record well on an excellent deck. Did I say WoW! On a diffent note, I have quite a few tapes I recorded live at outdoor blusgrass festival in the 1980s using a Sony WM-D6C (also long gone). Tapes were generally TDK SA-C90 and TDK AD-C90. These 30 year old tapes also sound good after all these years.
@anadialog Жыл бұрын
Sweet!!
@raulfantauzzi75473 жыл бұрын
Thank you ... Superb ... You have given my cassettes a whole new reason to come back to life ... I have visited a local old shop which gad maxell 2 with recordings on them i must say the gentlemen was tired of looking at them had near 100 and said give me 20 dollars and take them all! I skipped all the way home and began my new adventure ... Thank you your knowledge is a blessing for us uncalibrated people ... Maybe i can calibrate now ! ...
@RockNRod.3 жыл бұрын
Guido, one thing I love about your videos is your passion for all the different types of gear. Cassettes and reel to reels are definitely fun to play around with. I kept a lot of my albums in pristine condition by making cassette copies for everyday playing. Take care my friend.
@Andersljungberg2 жыл бұрын
Do you have a receiver or amplifier with tape output. so it's as easy to record as it was in the '90s
@tbrown655911 ай бұрын
We often did this back in the day, for convenience and to avoid damaging / wearing out records, and making mixtapes. I just taught my 15 year old son how to make a cassette mixtape. He has a Walkman, loves it. Yes he can just stream a playlist. Not the point. He said he likes holding the media in his hand- I get it my son!
@Multiprodukcija8 ай бұрын
Hi there, all your video clips are perfect which are covering TAPE decks and cassettes. I love them all and personally I think that companies should start producing tape decks again, as well the cassettes for us. Thank you for your afford and passion that you are bringing to us. We love tape decks... Best regards from Belgrade - Serbia (Technics lover)
@ryanreach37102 жыл бұрын
I bought a Sanyo M1050 handheld cassette recorder recently (5 euros, score!) I've been recording my beats onto it and love the sound. I can't find any info about my particular model though. Gonna try and find some tapes, the one it came with says Chrome TR60 (no name brand) seems a little noisy. Thanks for the tips! Love the sound, recorded a trac.k from Spotify onto it and wow.. sounds so nice. Thanks for the tips!
@myvinyljourney79083 жыл бұрын
Thanks for another amazing video, I am sure your love cassettes and I do understand why. When I speak to some of friend they laugh and say man it’s trash. I have invited them to come home and listen. People need to realise how great a cassette can sound when you use the right deck. I am using a Nakamichi LX5 and a BX300 and got it serviced by ex Nakamichi tech. I can challenge someone that it sounded as good as my Turntable or may end better in few cases. I played a commercial cassette of Eagles greatest hits and it sounded as good as the vinyl version which is AAA recording. Strongly get a good deck if you need to hear how fascinating a cassette sound. And yes it’s fun and compact and yes much compact than a CD
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely yes!
@AragonDubs2 жыл бұрын
Hey! What a KZbin channel! Low speeds are good too for many situations, speed are good for hi but low frecs go down. So many masters in half inch are better in 15ips, the bass and drums are so better. In Dub music the real eco sound comes from a reel to reel and low speeds are better. The chorus effect using two tape machines recording the same at the time.. Im in love too. Thanks!
@coby.travis4 ай бұрын
Recently got into cassettes after my cousin introduced it during dinner - unbeknownst to me, I found a TASCAM 122 MK3 at home. Can't wait to utilise it and make my own mix tapes from vinyls
@anadialog4 ай бұрын
Nice!👍🏻
@ricardoflot27875 ай бұрын
I NEVER gave up on cassettes, I've seen their pisspoor earlier performance develop into something BEYOND spectacular, and despite what I've been told, KEPT them alive and now....THEY'RE BAAACK! I ❤ them and have become so much better at recording, I get TOP performance from normal bias tapes, I have A GANG of type II and type IV and never really touch them much! The smoothest NB tapes I personally like are Fuji DR 1, next Maxel UR, Sony HF, and TDK NB HO, which have RIDICULOUS PB levels!
@timuroguz5 ай бұрын
Teşekkürler.
@anadialog5 ай бұрын
Bende tesekkur! Thank you very much for the support!
@chutgowdingo-loon32123 жыл бұрын
Still have my Aurex PCX88AD by Toshiba - 3 heads, manual calibration and ADRES (a DBX type compression / expansion system). An amazing though grossly under rated machine that could match it with the best.
@cubdukat2 жыл бұрын
Can you use that model in the US, or would you need a converter? If I recall right, Japanese market electronics run on 100V as opposed to 120V.
@chutgowdingo-loon32122 жыл бұрын
@@cubdukat I got mine in Australia so it runs 220 -240V. I use it in Canada withn a step up/down transformer from Amazon. The brand is called Seyas. I got the 500 watt version. It is fully automatic and relay controlled with circuit breakers that will trip if there is an issue. It can run to 100% of rated output without any issues at all. It is now around 60 bucks. Hope that answers your question. Cheers
@TheFonograf Жыл бұрын
The way I hear it, the hiss is all around us in everyday life (all that background noise we don't really notice), and that's why I consider tapes to be the most natural sound reproduction source. It's the hiss that gives tapes "that something" extra. That's why Type I tapes should not be underestimated. You can create great recordings on your standard TDK D easily. So the way I love to record my tapes is with DolbyB, peaking at max 1db, then switching Dolby off for a playback. That's my preference, but as I said, I've learned to embrace hiss long time ago.
@davidcooper8241 Жыл бұрын
recording with dolby B and then playing back with it turned off is often great - sometimes it just makes a recording sound amazing
@tbrown655911 ай бұрын
Never thought about doing that.. I think I’ll try it.
@josexavierjr.56332 жыл бұрын
I had an Akai GXF-90 deck from early '80s with manual tape calibration, and it was wonderful! You could record really "hot" without distortion, especially with chrome and metal.........I miss that machine.
@anadialog2 жыл бұрын
Oh no!
@MusicalHifi543 жыл бұрын
I love your videos! As a kid who grew up in the 80’s (born in 1977). I’m thinking of upgrading from my sharp double cassette player to an Akai. Can’t wait to add another cassette player to my collection. Cheers from Houston! 🥃
@pedrojmorais3 жыл бұрын
One very important thing for me in playback, i don't record anymore just listen to my old tapes, is play trim, I bought a Yamaha with play trim and it corrects bad bias recordings just before Dolby, a must to copy or listen to old tapes, a lot of tapes have bad bias recordings. Nobody talks about that and the main use is to play not to record, play trim is kind of a playback rebias. I love Dire Straits Brothers in Arms on a Basf Chrome extra recorded from CD at the low level this tape needs, and is better than CD, richer than vinyl, with sharp and profound sound, seams like a studio pro master processor, lots of air and everything in its place.
@ShareHobby3 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah!!! Hi-Res audio taped on compact cassette tape. Love it. Actually like it more than the digital streaming version. Add dbx for 92db SNR and music is barely discernible from the original, except music is a tad rolled off at high frequencies. Totally acceptable and enjoyable.😁
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah!
@manuelrumpal8381Ай бұрын
I was lucky to find in a local (rarely open) pawn shop two home-recorded type III tapes - BASF SM (90 minutes) and a Sony FeCr 90. I also got there Sony CDit II and a TDK CDing, all 90 minute, each for a less than dollar after conversion. They all sound excelent with what's on them, but I might try recording something on a decent deck.
@zulumax13 жыл бұрын
I bought a couple of cases of new production "black box" generic no name, no label type II chrome tapes a few years back. These were surprising, and sounded better than some name brand NOS tapes. Sometimes it is a gamble, and there are pleasant surprises.
@yannmounier21232 жыл бұрын
Top guidance.Thank you very much clear and concise.
@johnmarchington31463 жыл бұрын
Excellent suggestions. The only one I might consider querying was the one on using noise reduction.
@2011RAIMONDS3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for nice video. Cassettes still might be used as good format for listening however if you have appropriate network player then it can change your mind completely for further recording of cassettes. I have tried to listen Mark Levinson 5101 which has amazing sound quality, by the way, better from streaming than from CD except from SACD sources. If you want to get warmer sound then tube amplifiers are recommended, for instance Audio Note Soro line. But this point is related to quality of sound otherwise I fully agree on your analyzed other points to use audio cassettes.
@svenschwingel86323 жыл бұрын
That 1988 SA-X was a beast. Not only did it have a beautiful shell, its sound reproduction wasn't really linear compared to the SA or XLII even if you could calibrate sensitivity and bias. It sounded punchy and crisp due to the slight "dent" in the high-mids and low-treble which was typical for two-layer ferricobalt types of the time. If you had a three-point calibration like Pioneer's BLE, you could make these linear as well. But I really liked how they sounded "out of the box". It was a perfect tape for funk music and the extra treble served very well in a car or mobile players. Also, it could take loads of level with a really low noise floor ☺️ Downside: TDK tapes are somewhat sensitive towards bad mechanisms and tend to show railroading if your mech is out of alignment so used tapes will often be in bad condition. And getting these as NOS will cost you dearly. Paying 20€ for a single SA-X90EB is pretty common.
@TechGrandson9 ай бұрын
Check the service manual for your deck. The calibration on my Onkyo was completed with Maxell MX90, XLII90 and UDI90. In my efforts to grab a bunch of XL-IIS (1986) a lot includes some XLII and a UDI! Plus, I have some great jazz now (transferred to VHS EP (4 cassettes)) with only cassette containing "Miles Davis Solstice - 1989 - 1st concert - Opera House - Boston"!!! Great 36-minute set with crowd and everything!
@colloidalsilverwater15ppm883 жыл бұрын
Extremely good work. Thank you, Guido. I always loved that sweet smell of maxell. Just had to notice.
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
True!
@angelodagnolo984 Жыл бұрын
Hey! No convincing here 😁 I've had a AIWA ADF800 since 1989 and apart from installing MARS belts she still shines and I absolutely love her! Right up there with the top NAKS for a couple of hundred euro, you just can't beat them for the money and there are also the ANT mods!!
@michelforbes39583 жыл бұрын
Just bought a JVC CD-1636 for 60$, just need clean up and GO exellent recording and playback. Quite surprised by the ANRS Noise reduction, real y get a boost in the treble and quite compatible with Dolby B encoded tape. It's remarkable that the caseet I record in the 70's on TDK SA still sound good. Pre-recorded tape are always low quality... I connect an external DAC with the 24-96kHz version of FZ Sofa Album...sweeeet....with a TDK SA tape.
@jn37503 жыл бұрын
Nice tips! NR especially DBX (in a good quality deck) should be used when available. Even on high quality tapes such as TKD MA-XG, which I paid $106 for the evaluation (I do not recommend this tape as a new top-quality ATR Masters R2R tape costs less than this TDK but, when used with a pro r2r deck, walks all over anything from the cassette world including a freidn's Nakamichi Dragon) there is a noticeable improvement as BDX does not introduce any distortion (or "squish the spectrum") that is audible, based on my extensive testing. The noise reduction and enhancement in DR are VAST (my deck has a DR range of "at least 108 Db" , according to the manual, well above that of the CD). Also, there is NO detectible noise nor any loss in high frequency details (I used a pair of high quality Audezee phones and 4K preamp/amp combo to do this test). BTW, recording from high res sources is the way to go (the only reason I am going back to the cassette tapes, as CDs/vinyls (pops and clicks) aren't hifi enough and I have DSD, hi res PMC and copies of master r2r tapes).
@RUfromthe40s4 ай бұрын
i only use dolby when erecording demos in my home studio , this because of diferent sources with diferent outputs to iliminate some hiss coming from diferent amplifiers and the DBX NR is a module that worKs better than the dolby in regular decks,
@alvarocoutinho31036 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video! I know it’s now two years old, but… What’s your take on Nakamichi 600? I know it’s not 3 but 3 heads… anyway, how do you see it? Thanks. Keep up the great work!
@Robert-sg4ep Жыл бұрын
This was great video ! Thanks !
@georgebarrett21323 жыл бұрын
Hey! My favorite topic. Thanks Guido.. ..am forever experimenting for something new but worthy with the dbx voltage control amps, 700 adc/dac , and lll-NR systems. cassette tape has always been my passion and guilty sin of the flesh, Frankenstein experimentation... ...when I've found some solid advance I always commit them on the thicker C10-30 min types ll-lV from niche manufactures like thomasin and such------I have the patience when it comes to ultimate reproduction. music?--->WBA(Was Born Analog!)
@hugobloemers44253 жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks!!
@cubdukat3 жыл бұрын
A warning about true chromes: buy new. And by new, I mean, buy versions towards the end of the tape's run. Even sealed true chrome tapes have a tendency to deteriorate, so the younger you buy, the less of a problem that should be. But beware the BASF/EMTEC chromes; they're not true chromes anymore. They're still really good and mostly chrome, just not pure chrome.
@tweakerman3 жыл бұрын
I still love cassettes, they might not be audiophile, but a good cassette desk can sound amazing, I have lots of that suono metal cassettes, in my opinion one of the best metal was ever made, great video well done👍
@mielefan88113 жыл бұрын
I have a really Basic Deck. Its an technics m13 Tapedeck and it Sounds really good
@itnaklipse16692 жыл бұрын
My understanding is that cassette tape's sound doesn't really deteriorate with re-recordings unless there's actual physical deterioration of the tape, meaning that even all the old tapes one has, provided they have been stored well enough, should give equal results to an unused tape. My own experience re-using Type II and Type IV tapes from 30 years ago would definetely support this - and some of them had been taped over on estimate 3-5 times before, yet the magnetic capacity had not deteriorated at all. There's very close to true fidelity to the high-res files/vinyls i've taped on them.. they sound fantastic (just today did Radiohead's A Moon-Shaped Pool from vinyl and while i can't say it sounds EXACTLY the same, it sounds so close the difference is negligible with my average equipment more couldn't be asked for.) Point being, the problem most certainly is not that the tape had been recorded over many times... only that inherently tape is just not exactly same as vinyl. Still, soooo much better than CD. If you think otherwise, and that pristine or NOS tapes are better, maybe you could make some tests and a video on it... :)
@davidcooper8241 Жыл бұрын
This is also my impression. Lots of old pre-recorded tapes in charity shops where i live, but hard to find blanks - so I've tried recording over the pre-recorded ones and they also sound just as good
@babylemonade28683 жыл бұрын
I’ve got a fostex 8 track reel to reel from 2000. Maybe I should get it out and do and record a couple of records to see how it sounds. Even got a few tapes still in their wrappers
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Yeah!
@colloidalsilverwater15ppm883 жыл бұрын
BTW, can you do aretrospective or measurements of DDR cassettess, ORWO?
@zulumax13 жыл бұрын
19:00 Actually the Dragon does not calibrate itself as far as bias, level, equalization is concerned, that is manual. It automatically calibrates the head azimuth to the recorded content on playback only. Just to clarify that to the audience. This has no effect on the recorded information laid down by the record head which is fixed and adjusted during a full alignment by a tech.
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
At 18:58 I said for playback and then In fact I mentioned the Dragon
@DrMidnight-oz1rk7 ай бұрын
Tdk, Cd Bass is my favorite to use for recording
@kravchuk0073 жыл бұрын
Excellent !
@storm-sf5rj3 жыл бұрын
i bought my first cassette machine in 1970 and it was the original Philips mono portable with the mechanical play switch but i soon upgraded to Reel to Reel with a AKAI 4000DS but as Cassettes got better with Dolby 'B' i bought my first Top End Machine in 1976 it was a AKAI 325D with 3 Heads and Dual Capstan, that served me well for a number of years until i bought a SONY TCK81 in 1981 and i still have it but in the mid 2000's i bought my first Dolby S machine as it was only £50 on eBay i think it was a SONY TCK 554S 3 head adjustable bios but single capstan that served me well for a few years until the belts perished so i replaced that for another SONY a TCK711S Dual Capstan 3 head for a reasonable £150 but i wanted Better so last year i bought a SONY TC-KA6ES i think that was the last Top End Cassette that SONY sold in the UK, but i wanted Better i could afford a Nakamichi Dragon but i let my Head rule my Heart and Bought in my opinion a better Cassette Machine a REVOX B215 Fully Serviced, Motors Oiled, re-capped new Pinch Rollers and the reason i bought the REVOX over the Dragon is it has no Belts and is Direct Drive so it will last me and whoever i pass it on to for another 40 years i also have 6 Reel to Reel Tape Recorders but that's another Story
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
What a journey! Remember though that also the Dragon is direct drive.
@RayDAider1 Жыл бұрын
I shop at thrift shops....second hand stores looking for cassette tapes. Just today I found, in EXELLENT SHAPE, over forty Maxell XLIIS 90 minute tapes with music recorded on them for $.50 cents each. I'm in the process now of erasing them to use in electronic music production here at home studio....I'm using a Tascam 302 dual machine that I bought brand new in the year 2000...it has probably 20 hours use on it. I'm finally getting around to utilizing it.
@anadialog Жыл бұрын
Nice!
@rockabillyproject82663 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing, I still have many cassettes, particular original rare band demos. What do you recommend for reattaching cassette labels that have fallen off due to age? Is there a glue that won't damage the tape or old label paper?
@thehunterofdeath21803 жыл бұрын
Good video thank you bro like your equipment you got cool stuff I'm just started to build my studios so I put all my record n cd n cassettes tape collection n my tape decks collection you right I had a few tape deck put away for years n some of them was tripping I have to send it to fix soon cus they are expensive for what I see on ebay now those nakamichi revox n I got other pretty good decks now once in a while I put it to use so the machine don't get stuck they need to be play you right about that I love tape 2 they sound really good than tape 1 more bass I like the revox for recording n you right I could make it sound better than the cd some cd are low valume I could make it a little louder when I record in cassettes tapes I love tape deck n turntable they got some nice tape deck that look fresh n cool that what good about tape decks 😅👍😎
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Take'm out! :-)
@little.zayzay3 ай бұрын
I have a sound design cassette deck and I have a cassette tape I put tape over it to record over it but when I go to go back to play back the recording there's nothing there but the existing audio that was on the tape before it is not recording into the cassette 😢.
@anadialog3 ай бұрын
I think the recording head is broken!
@didioentoro75753 жыл бұрын
Well, back to my experinces around 1980, Nakamichi was the best if you recorded and play in the same deck BUT Teac deck was universal, means if it was calibrated you can play it in any deck with very good result. Automatic bias ? Well, I did not remember well if it was equal to manual bias using dolby level, speed check tape and azimuth tape. These are the tapes for recording calibration.
@FLH3official3 жыл бұрын
Pinch roller cleaning: In my opinion, avoid pure alcohol, it's drying them. If you don't have a "special product" for that you can use window cleaner on a cotton bud, it's less agressiv.
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
I agree but I must say that a lot of tapeheads do that...
@Badassvidsz2 жыл бұрын
Great video dear Guido as usual . Happy April :-)
@anadialog2 жыл бұрын
Thank you my man!
@bazza2825 Жыл бұрын
I have a 1973 Akai tape deck with chrome selection, one of the 1st to have I heard, gee just looked on ebay for tapes and they have gone up in price, I purchased 2 x 5 pack of Maxell Chrome for about $50 each pack about 6 yrs ago now well over $100.
@craigavonvideo3 жыл бұрын
One simple tip that I used back in the 80s and 90s (when I was using cassettes in a BIG way) is to always fast forward and then rewind a new tape before use. This frees up the tape inside the cassette mechanism and leaves it correctly wound on the hub for your particular deck. Also I've never found a deck that had variable audio level outputs, everything is either line level (phono) out or professional level transformer balanced XLR out. It would only be the headphone output that would be variable, and you wouldn't normally use that to connect to an amp or other device. Dolby NR should essentially sound "lossless" in that there should be no treble loss when it it switched in on playback (assuming that the tape was recorded with Dolby on in the first place). The big problem was that lots of (cheaper) decks had a very bad implimentation of Dolby where, when engaged on playback, it sounded like the whole top end was muffled. I agree, that on those decks you were best to leave it permanently switched out and just watch your recording levels (keeping them as high as possible without going permanently into the red) to achieve a good signal-to-noise ratio without distortion. Also, 3-head decks were a must for any tape recoding enthusiast, as you could instantly tell how good a recording you were getting with off-tape monitoring. In the late 1990s, I moved on to MiniDisc - still the best home recording system ever invented IMHO (and I've never forgiven Sony for basically killing it off purely for copyright reasons) but I still have hundreds of tapes in the loft (mainly Sony or TDK Chromes and Metals) but also including an unopened TDK MA-R 90 :)
@EddieJazzFan2 жыл бұрын
Here is another tip: Those Tascam porta-studios can only use type 2 cassettes. They are only calibrated for hi-bias tape and it is not possible to switch to either normal or metal tape.
@kw29662 жыл бұрын
i have got the a few new sealed blank cassette form the stores recently, when i try to record it, non of them produce any sound, is there any way i can fix the problems?
@anadialog2 жыл бұрын
Don't worry. That is Impossible. You must be doing a mistake along the road. Which deck are you using? Are the notches on top of the cassette sealed? Are you sure the source signal is reaching the deck?
@Tarazatfilms Жыл бұрын
Could we just proceed ?
@ΓΙΑΝΝΗΣΜΠΙΤΣΑΚΗΣ4 ай бұрын
1. Maxell UR is not ne. It is new old stock as the rest, except that it was in production for much longer. 2. Pre used is a gamble, since you don't know the life of them, unless bought from a known person who treated them with respect. 3. BASF can be used in Japanese decks with very good results, comparable to equivalent Japanese tapes. The deal is to be able to bias them properly. 4. Clean pinch roller and capstan very important, as much or even more than the heads. 5. No consumer graded source puts out more than digital (i.e 2V rms). This is not a problem in setting the rec level on any deck. So no attenuation is needed. 6. Dolby (C at least to my experience) does not harm the stereo image. 7. Tapes do not need lubrication!
@anadialog4 ай бұрын
Yes, they absolutely do need lube when it dries out. A lot of people ignore that but it is part of any binder. I did a video on the topic: kzbin.info/www/bejne/paecl6WEr9alnrcsi=x-C8bZLzqcoDXI2a In the video description you will find several scientific articles that demonstrate that this was a standard procedure in the past.
@didioentoro75753 жыл бұрын
Hi, anybody know where to repair or check my old cassette decks ? I still have TEAC A-36 and TEAC V6000. If taking about cassette recording, where or which service center does have JIG, Dolby Level, speed check and azimuth tape ? That is the important tools for recording. Your help will.be appreciated. Thanks.
@littlevibetown3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for you service
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Thank YOU!
@atoiler1389 Жыл бұрын
I own a Pioneer CT-F700. Just recently purchased. May I ask which cassette you recommend for recording. Thank you!
@anadialog Жыл бұрын
If you can get old cassettes, type I or much better type II and IV. If you want to go new I recommend the Type I by Recording the Masters and the good old Maxell UR.
@Voxeldust6 күн бұрын
I have 5 blank Maxell UR90s at my desk while watching this.
@TorchySmurf3 ай бұрын
I'm finding that I need to re-calibrate the speed of my machine more frequently than I should have to. Is that sing that the capstan is needing to be replaced?
@anadialog3 ай бұрын
That is surely one aspect to check but maybe also belts!
@jonseymour18663 жыл бұрын
I used the basf pro 2 chrome tapes
@JoolioA10 ай бұрын
Hello, about noise reduction you recommend to not use it with type II and upper cassettes, is that for both playback and recording?
@anadialog9 ай бұрын
If the cassette is of high quality in most cases yes, it is not necessary IMO. Coming to your question, when you record you are the one deciding to use it or not, in playback it depends if the recording adopted it. If it was used, the you MUST use it also during playback at that point. In other words in playback it’s not a choice, it depends only if it was used or not during the recording phase.
@JoolioA9 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@zulumax13 жыл бұрын
17:30 I have a collection of cassette decks. I prefer to record on my Denon DRM-740 from 1998 which uses Dolby HX pro in the recording process, is way easier to record on than the Nakamichi Dragon that I have, and keeps the hours off of the Dragon. I playback tapes that I have on the Dragon which will align itself to the plethora of machines I have used to record on over the years.
@thehunterofdeath21803 жыл бұрын
Denon cassettes decks are great I bought a few of them in the past never had trouble with them n use n some look cool good tape deck for they price on eBay but is good to buy a use one that was fix is the best if they even had problem..you need to use them too cus they get stuck all that mechanic stuff inside it happens to one of my tape deck had it in the closet for years never use it man I had to send it to fix to a professional cus a lot of people don't know how to fix them n make it worse for you always send it to a professional dude that know how to fix cassettes decks that happen to me too tried to go the cheap way 😂 he fuk it up for me make it worse
@zulumax13 жыл бұрын
@@thehunterofdeath2180 I am a tech and I do work on my own decks, I have the test tapes and the equipment to repair and calibrate them, so I don't have to trust someone else's workmanship, I know who to blame. Leaving any electronic gear in storage for long periods of time without using it is very hard on it. Cold, dampness, dust, dirt, insects, rodents and such are also harmful in long storage in a garage or shed. Exercise the switches, and controls back and forth several times (50x back and forth) every few months or they will become oxidized, stiff, and noisy. I spray the controls only as a last resort, because the D5 spray can damage the carbon track in some potentiometers, and can also wash out the grease on the shaft making it not smooth feeling anymore.
@joeschmo79573 жыл бұрын
Wow, ferrichrome... did somebody turn back the time machine? I had my old Sanyo dual cassette down in Florida with me for awhile. On a whim, I gifted it to someone. It happens.
@leonardoingala5759 Жыл бұрын
Hi, is correct to connect cassette recorder inputs to audio interface headphone outputs (I have an Apogee Element 46)?
@anadialog Жыл бұрын
No, headphones output is not a line output. I see you only have balanced XLR outputs. You can get an XLR to RCA cables and send the signal to the recorder that way. These for example are excellent: www.amazon.com/Oyaide-Class-Female-Cable-Green/dp/B00H95Y05K/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?crid=3HUD3IHI3F1DY&keywords=xlr+rca+oyaide&qid=1676708270&sprefix=xlr+rca+oyaide%2Caps%2C318&sr=8-3&ufe=app_do%3Aamzn1.fos.304cacc1-b508-45fb-a37f-a2c47c48c32f
@infesticon3 жыл бұрын
I need some one to make chrome and metal cassettes.
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Me too!
@robertspencer79213 жыл бұрын
Excellent information
@romans116notw2 жыл бұрын
The best place to find new unopened cassette tapes is at an open air swap meet. I’ve bought about a dozen of them over the past couple of weeks.
@madmetalofsixties2315 Жыл бұрын
Ciao, i use Akai CS-34D what do you think? ;)
@Rmulberger2 жыл бұрын
I'm nostalgic for tapes too...but old tapes eventually die. If you enjoy recording in analog, try getting a good Hi-Fi VCR. They actually record audio diagonally making them the equivalent of a 3/4" wide tape. Also, you can buy VHS tapes that give you up to 6 hours on a single tape. I've been told wider tape result in better audio, hence the 1" and 2" reel to reel tape recorders.
@anadialog2 жыл бұрын
Yup, did 2 videos on the subject: kzbin.info/www/bejne/mZ-nkJtrd7t_m8U
@ΟρσιαΑθανασιου3 жыл бұрын
I love tapes for recording and playback . We can use two or three decks for recording the problem is that the most decks are used and here in Greece the most of them are not working. Tascams have new decks. Do you know another company ? (except ion)
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Check this (terrible list I made): kzbin.info/www/bejne/hJuvhneHpbGWisU
@SunnyAustria2 жыл бұрын
Alcohol on the pinch rollers is a very hard way. Maybe go with something softer. Windex etc... Im intersted about the things with the input/output voltages. Ill never had a Problem with that. Maybe it was a sensitiv machine in your chain? Nice greetings from Austria
@RUfromthe40s4 ай бұрын
sony is a brand that wasn´t the best but kept releasing well built cassettes and the UX from 93 was one of the best built cassettes ever but i prefer the UX-pro, those esprit series i bought them to play in the car , were great ,some think that ES stands for elevated standart but always meant esprit series , in comercials, cheap av receivers where they didn´t had nothing to put there they wrotte elevated standart but it´s only for comercial reasons i think the cassettes says esprit also ,my first ES system was bought in 82 and it was written there esprit series
@richardsinger013 жыл бұрын
I always found the dbx noise reduction on my old Technics deck was vastly better than Dolby B or C. It completely removes hiss and gives you near perfect recordings. (I always used TDK AD which was a good quality “normal” tape). But now that car stereos and portable music players no longer use cassette they have no purpose as far as I am concerned. It’s a shame I sent all my old cassettes to landfill years ago, they might have been worth something now.
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Indeed, I have shown that here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/mnfcd6GBe5hmrNE But some fine detail is lost, compressed
@fts813 жыл бұрын
What about good cassettes for pioneer decks?
@joseg49843 жыл бұрын
Got video love make cassette this days.
@jmi59693 жыл бұрын
Re. #9 (don't use full output) - it's not applicable for all decks. Some decks have output buffer amps, some don't. In the latter case the Dolby or dbx IC drives the volume pot with a fairly low-level signal, which then goes from the wiper of the pot to a series resistor (usually around 1 kOhm, and as much as 2.5 kOhm in case of the Technics) and only then to the output RCA socket. There's no way it can overload anything downstream, and adding more resistance into the signal path makes little sense. When servicing such decks I'd usually connect the output RCA to the hot end of the pot via a 75-Ohm resistor; the pot remains functional for the headphone amp but not for line output.
@DavidJohnson69-qq2bo3 ай бұрын
Great video!!! I have my Onkyo 3 head TA-2700, which when using Metal tape, very accurately reproduces the sound on a CD. I just want to say that the NOS TDK MA 110 cost me almost $40, just wanting to try Type IV again. The new, not NOS, Maxell UR=90 tape, in its physical construction, sounded like it was going to physically come apart when forward winding and rewinding. So, in my opinion, this newly produced Maxell Type I tape has lower physical quality than the NOS versions.
@artyfhartie22693 жыл бұрын
Also cassettes must be stored properly upright away from heat and dust or they will warp, dry out and the pressure pads will fall off (can be stuck back with care). And also when cleaning the heads, be careful not to apply pressure or the heads will go off alignment and cause wow and flutter. But in some cassette decks , you can remove the cassette cover compartment, play a tape and with a small screwdriver, turn the small left screw on the playing head a very tiny bit left and right and listen for the sound to become nice and solid and seal screw with nail polish to stop it from moving over time. Tape are the best sound medium. All the best audiophile recordings are from analogue tape recordings.
@yehor253 жыл бұрын
Nice video, also guys try to buy new cassettes support the market and maybe someday we will have new type 2 or even type 4 tapes
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Indeed!!
@Avtoigor13 жыл бұрын
@@anadialog Never again :( progress will not stop. We are just a bunch of marginals who are still fumble on the ruins of the former empire :)
@DOLFINOWOLF3 жыл бұрын
WOW !!!! 🙏👍✌️🤯
@sir.maccc-2 жыл бұрын
when i play a pre recorded cassette with the b side(record/ playback side) of my cassette player / recorder , it sounds like wonky. if i record (on the b side) a cassette and play it on the a side it plays the recording and its wonky. but playing a prerecorded tape on side a , it plays just fine. what does that mean?
@denniscampbell83 Жыл бұрын
Some tape shells(usually cheap sealed ones) are warped, so the path the tape takes is not straight. The best cure for that is to transfer the tape inside to another high quality shell with screws.
@georgekirk6542 жыл бұрын
these tapes are only available the unites states anybody know where and how we can order them? thanks
@MrSlipstreemАй бұрын
I disagree with you on noise reduction for perfectly sensible technical reasons. If a person has the opportunity to use Dolby C on a well calibrated deck, even decent Type I tapes can give spectacularly good performance. As well as providing excellent noise reduction, Dolby C was designed to combat the effects of tape saturation with a technique called spectral skewing. This linearises the tape's performance and makes a good Type I tape behave almost identically to a Type IV tape in terms of frequency response and dynamics. I have two decks here that I've specifically calibrated for cheap TDK FE Type I tapes and they both give a frequency response of 20Hz to 20kHz within 1dB when using Dolby C.
@magnificussonus26693 жыл бұрын
I have recorded a cassette type ll on my Technics RS - B55 , obviously using dbx. Every time l play some of Yello songs on it l can't believe what l hear. l have put aside my cd player and don't use it anymore. l play my deck through equilizer to a valve amp and set of Kenwoods KL - 4040 ( 1975). ln my opinion l don't need a deck with three heads and five motors to make quality recordings. Obviously deck must be in good condition ( heads , mechanizm etc.) Prices of those decks with three heads are insane...and l really don't understand why. I would like to try one to find out whether it makes any difference.....but l dont think is worth spending ten times more money.
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Congrats!! 3 heads do make a difference ..soon a video on this and related topics.
@vincenzocirillo79803 жыл бұрын
ciao Guido, eppure io ti aspetto con una bel video che spieghi come regolare un ottimo livello di registrazione parlando di SOL, MOL, e compagnia bella (ovvero in base alle caratteristiche dichiarate della nastro), ti rinnovo quindi la richiesta :-) Magari inserendo nel video come calibri tu una registrazione, i passi che fai... del tipo riavvolgi prima tutto il nastro? Mandi avanti di un paio di minuti e poi setti la calibrazione? Poi la rifinisci in cuffia o con il semplice ascolto dagli speaker switchando tra source e tape?
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
Grazie Vincenzo, vedrai che alla fine lo faccio ma non tu immaginare chissà che cosa! ;-)
@late4suppa1 Жыл бұрын
I just started recording at home again and am planning on using a new digital 12 channel Teac mixer into Studio One. Once I have everything recorded and sounding the way I want I’m going to play it back into the room through my system because that’s when it usually sounds the best. Then I’ll use my Ribbon mic to record the mastered song into a 1968 Teac 3 mixer and from there into a cassette. The deck recording will then be fed back into the computer. I’m assuming they recorded a lot like this in the 50’s but I can’t really find out much about this method. I thought of this method because I do it all the time with my cell phone. Any suggestions?
@anadialog Жыл бұрын
Hi, not sure if I understood correctly but I don’t recommend to record your room, the results will always be quite poor.
@RayDAider1 Жыл бұрын
When I was a kid we used paper spit wads to stick in the hole when the tabs were broke out....Can I get a witness?
@Rareparrot Жыл бұрын
Hi - thanks for your channel and this video. Please, don't start a video with a 5 min introduction :) Y a w n !!! My tip - and you probably covered it, keep (cassettes) away from magnets. Be it speaker magnets or what ever. I have a watch charger and torch charger both are very magnetic. Been using cassettes a while. Great fun in the 80's and 90's. I'm over 50.
@trinhthang3693 жыл бұрын
i have used several cassette devices but the same series of the same manufacturer but the sound quality is not the same - LO-D78 - TECNNICK M222 - AKAI63 - TECNNICH M202 ..... why???
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
There are differences, in the heads, the wear of parts, capacitors health, transport quality, choice of electronics for the preamp...so many variables
@trinhthang3693 жыл бұрын
@@anadialog thanks
@scotthullinger46842 жыл бұрын
Somebody tell me why a blank cassette is so dreadfully expensive. I haven't bought one for years. But when I recently checked the price on Ebay, a 2 pack of 110 minute TDK brand metal tapes was $50.00. That price is higher than whichever compact disc I might be copying. Furthermore, it's not as if there are a lot of new tape decks on the market, and the ones which have existed for a while, even the best brands, are dead.
@anadialog2 жыл бұрын
Cassettes are trendy and a lot of people use them for recording and producing electronic or underground music...it's the cassette culture!
@Thomatensoep3 жыл бұрын
I bought a cassette player that isn't used in 20 years or something, do you think it still works?
@anadialog3 жыл бұрын
It could but it will not perform optimally even if it was brand new