Here is a 'how to' video about keeping your tape heads clean and demagnetized. There is a lot of bad info floating around on this subject and I wanted to set the record straight. :) JC
Пікірлер: 419
@HansensUniverseT-A4 жыл бұрын
We're well into 2020 and i still listen to audio tapes on a daily basis, not sure how many out there that still actively so it but there is still folks out there who keep them going!
@cartoonworld10004 жыл бұрын
They're some of the coolest things ever on the face of the planet
@johnrobison68803 жыл бұрын
47 year hobby. Over 1,000. Yes the old ones still play and sound good.
@adityasanthanam19453 жыл бұрын
A well recorded cassette on good tape can sound just as good as a CD or other digital stuff. Also, no need to convert to other formats if you are happy with what you have. Why change if it is already great? And reel-to-reel still beats everything to this day, but is very expensive and unobtainable for most.
@anthonyarbeau71183 жыл бұрын
Heck yeah, have childhood tapes that now my kids are listening to!
@littlebosaMusic3 жыл бұрын
They're still hella popular too. In 2019 the sales were rivaling thoes of the 1980s
@mourningmorning88498 жыл бұрын
I'd like to mention how professional and well spoken you are in this video. I typically go through several videos when searching for help for a situation due to many being hard to understand or just plain frustrated to follow. This is much appreciated.
@stephenmahlstedt85334 жыл бұрын
I realize it’s been 10 years since you posted this video, and not sure if you’re checking comments still, but just in case...thank you very much!!! I just purchased my first tape deck (an early 90s Sony TC-WR700), and there was a lot of noise on playback. Cleaned as best I could with the 91% alcohol, and used a Marphar Head Demagnetizer I bought on Amazon for $20. Playback sounds great now!! Only the slightest bit of normal tape hiss is detectable. Very helpful video. Thank you again. Cheers!
@Suedeash5 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for this guide. I've used Walkmans for a long time but just bought a Technics last week, very thorough and well explained - very surprised you're still helping people out on this video after 10 years!
@tgorycki68252 жыл бұрын
This is great info presented in an excellent, easy to understand, yet not overbearing manner. One thing I would add is to perform any demagnetizing far away from any prerecorded tapes. Thanks for this!
@bletheringfool2 жыл бұрын
Very valuable info. You can still buy brand new tape recorders and tape from Bush in the UK at Argos and Sainsburys in 2021 so this info is still useful. I recently got a 2nd hand Sony TCM-939 portable and have been following these instructions (it's been so long I forgot how to do it) but I never demagnetized the heads in the 80s and 90s.
@highlife05868 жыл бұрын
Thank you. To me this is still very educational. I have been an audio/hi fi/video hobbyist since 1959. I am actually more interested in demagnetizing the tape heads. I have two rather old cassette decks that I am using to burn my cassette tapes onto CD's so this helps.
@luisbo3334 жыл бұрын
Try turning them into mp3 files.. thats what Im doing with Audacity
@mullerman11043 жыл бұрын
Good thing I see this now. I haven’t demagnetized my Cassette Deck in 20 years.
@edwardlimney51317 жыл бұрын
i have been into finding and collecting,and refurbishing cassettes with 80's style "boomboxes" and this channel kick ass in helping me to better understand my newly found hobby. Thanks for the info🖒
@remixandkaraoke4 жыл бұрын
Outstanding video, my brother! You're clear, concise and precise!
@stewartbruce89022 жыл бұрын
The original cassette player in my older volvo just started playback with a much muffled sound. Your explanation was very helpful to me, and I thank you for a superb tutorial. It is authors such as yourself that make you tube a valuable learning tool.
@THOMMGB9 жыл бұрын
You've provided a lot of good information here. I recently picked up a Technics M63 three head cassette deck and found the capstan was covered with a rather heavy coating of oxide. It looked almost like it had rusted, it was so bad. I used alcohol and a Q tip and was going nowhere fast when I decided to use my fingernail to scrape the brown oxide off. That worked very well and the cleaning process went much quicker. I then went over the capstan with the alcohol and Q tip to get any small particles I missed. I have an old TDK demagnetiser cassette I used on the head, but I really should demagnetise the capstan, like your video showed. This deck now sounds very nice and works very well. Regards, Tom
@EzeeLinux9 жыл бұрын
THOMMGB Yeah, sometimes you gotta scrape to get it off if no one ever kept up with it. Glad to hear you got it clean and sounding good. :)
@wilfredheggart6476 жыл бұрын
what i need now is a vhs head cleaner for my video camera
@wilfredheggart6475 жыл бұрын
yes i did i got the dubbing to work too
@mdzacharias13 жыл бұрын
Nice to see someone who knows their stuff for a change. I repair consumer electronics for a living and its funny but also sad the bad info out there.
@nigeladams83216 жыл бұрын
R.I.P. RadioShack
@65sgboogieman85 жыл бұрын
Nigel Adams it’s really sad, tbh
@fritzthecat504 жыл бұрын
Nice tutorial on cleaning cassette decks. My hat is off to you sir. Back in the day we never thought of cleaning them wirhout the cassette tape for cleaning heads. Thank you.
@michaelevans29866 жыл бұрын
This is a good intro to tape transport care - besides the comment about issues with using head cleaner on rubber parts mentioned elsewhere, the other thing I'd add is professional cleaning swabs are NOT a waste of money. They are longer for better reach, have lower lint/are wrapped more tightly than q-tips and you need to keep them in the bag they come in to keep them clean until you use them and avoid touching the tip you are going to use to clean the transport. Getting dirt and oil from your skin on something you are going to use to clean delicate equipment is not a good idea and using cleaning solutions designed for the job is a good idea.
@LesterBrunt12 жыл бұрын
You can achieve different sound color or texture with a tape recorder. Especially if you let it distort a bit, it gives a different sound then digital distortion. You can use it for instance to record a song on a computer then run the final recording through a tape machine so you get that tape coloring that most times is better then the digital emulations and then record that back into the computer again.
@MrMrpony Жыл бұрын
Yep. That is why I’m here. 👍🏽 I’ve got an antique Sony portable box with proper inputs for studio use.
@troystanley97987 жыл бұрын
thank you so much my dad gave me this old tape recorder and i have been using it for about a year and i could never get good sound out of it but after this video i gave the heads a good clean and now it works wonderfully
@EzeeLinux14 жыл бұрын
Yes. As long as the tip of the probe is covered with rubber there's no chance of damaging the heads. Some older demagnetizers have metal probes that would scratch the heads if they came in contact while they were energized. JC
@torit92562 жыл бұрын
2022 here. Listening to my tapes on my old Sony yellow Walkman. Bahaha. Love old school and went power goes out I get my radio going. It all works. Thanks for the vid. I’m one the few who never cleaned and now it’s eating my tapes 😢
@highhat52294 жыл бұрын
Just got an ad for Nickelodeon... I don't really think younger kids will be watching this 😂
@KalsAudio10 жыл бұрын
Your video was very informative and very thorough. Well instructed and very easy to follow along. You sir... are a man who knows how to teach and for that. I THANK YOU. Great GREAT instructive video.
@EzeeLinux10 жыл бұрын
Thanks! :)
@wilfredheggart6475 жыл бұрын
back to its old home to stay until the end of its life
@TheReal19537 ай бұрын
I've never heard of this procedure before. Traditionally, you bring the demagnetizer tip in slowly with it turned on. You sweep the head(s) or metal parts back and forth with the tip for five seconds without touching anything. For each piece you do, you back away from that piece to like a meter away before you shut off the unit. Rinse & repeat for each piece you demag.
@discofriend85225 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the incredibly thorough video....
@martyjewell56836 жыл бұрын
A much easier way to de-mag the heads is with a TDK HD-01 cassette head demagnetizer. You have to change the battery every few years but it is simple. Just pop in the cassette shaped demagnetizer, press play and a little light will go on when done. I've had my HD-01 for over 35 years and it works.
@Stewbular8 жыл бұрын
Back in the day, I would carry a head cleaning cassette w a small bottle of alcohol with my cassettes. I wouldn't put one of my cassettes in someone's car deck without cleaning it first. I used Q-tips on home decks. I still have cassettes of old progressive rock radio shows from the 60's and from my all time fav Jazz radio station, KRE in Berkeley, which I play every year at X-Mas to keep them in good shape. I have transferred many to digital. Good radio stations come and go; WSHE, WRVG, KFAT, ETC. Some once great stations were neutered by AOR like KSAN & WEBN for instance.
@Christuserloeser8 жыл бұрын
Maybe you could upload some of your digitized tapes to youtube for preservation ?
@Stewbular8 жыл бұрын
***** good idea
@Mikexception7 жыл бұрын
I am afraid You cann't do this in case not having publishing rights.
@wilfredheggart6477 жыл бұрын
mabey I am taping my vinyl onto cassettes
@wilfredheggart6476 жыл бұрын
mine that i had taped got stolen
@EzeeLinux14 жыл бұрын
@olderngod I'm glad you found the video useful. If you are not having any problem with your machines and you're not allowing them to be close to anything putting out a strong magnetic field then you most likely don't have to worry much about degaussing the heads. I mainly do it when I get a used machine and I don't know where it's been. After that, I do it maybe once in five years, if that. :) JC
@alec46724 жыл бұрын
My cousin put a fridge magnet inside my grandmother's tape deck when we were kids. Me and him lived in town but it took a month and a half for my uncle to be there for Christmas and figure out why her tapes were getting so weak and staticky
@Topsrite10 жыл бұрын
Nice, never really understood how to de-mag the heads properly, good video :-)
@vidtech26302 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video , now I know exactly how to use my newly acquired wand demagnetiser.
@EzeeLinux13 жыл бұрын
@hohum83 That myth about the alcohol damaging the pinch roller just doesn't have a leg to stand on. Alcohol won't damage rubber unless you leave it to soak for a long time. You should clean until the swap comes back clean. It really takes a lot of juice to properly demag,. I don't know if the cassette kind generates enough power to get the job done... Anything is better than nothing, though. :) JC
@Musicradio77Network3 жыл бұрын
I got the Audio brand head demagnetizer 400 and it still works after I plugged in. I demagnetized these heads on both reel-to-reel tape recorders including my Akai 1721W and my Concord 220T and it does the job done since I moved slowly to demagnetize the recording and erase heads without getting it touched, so that it won’t damage any of the heads. I have to leave the machine off or unplug while I’m demagnetizing the heads.
@Some_Techie2 жыл бұрын
I never cleaned my 4 track before and oh my god there was so much gunk on the pinch roller and heads. Thank you for this video.
@Bigbadwhitecracker6 ай бұрын
Nearly 15 years alter and this is still a great video. Would you consider doing a follow up/sequel and actually show us how to use a demagnetizer in video form and not just stills?
@EzeeLinux6 ай бұрын
I don;t even have any tape machines anymore.
@MusicJunky39 жыл бұрын
Joe, you are the man ! All hail JC ! Hereinafter to be called Sir JC.
@EzeeLinux9 жыл бұрын
+MusicJunky3 Thanks... I think. LOL :)
@wilfredheggart6475 жыл бұрын
mine i bought it
@anthonyrock-the-universal-one6 жыл бұрын
in 2017 radio shack no longer exists. sad.
@65sgboogieman85 жыл бұрын
Anthony Rock it really is
@waymanrosshurley31414 жыл бұрын
Still open here, 1702 N College Ave, Fayetteville, AR 72703
@skipnick3 жыл бұрын
i mean theres still apparently a good amount of them within an hour of nyc
@AmIonArock11 жыл бұрын
thanks, very professional, and you cleared up questions I have had for 30 years.ty
@davidbonds3571 Жыл бұрын
One caution about demagnetizing erase heads. If your machine has an electrically energized erase head, then yes, demagnetize it like you would a play or record head, guide, capstan, etc. HOWEVER... Some consumer machines, especially portables, use a permanent magnet erase head. The mechanism moves it into contact with the tape only in Record mode, and retracts it away from the head otherwise. DO NOT demagnetize this type of erase head. Otherwise, you will no longer be able to erase a tape prior to recording on it. The ways to tell are to look for wires connected to the erase head, and observe the movement of the erase head when transitioning from Stop to Play or Record.
@katrinaprice2816 Жыл бұрын
I have a loud buzzing noise on my old JVC boombox. Tried the cotton swab and alcohol. Looks like I will have to try with the demagnitizer now, as the problem is still there.
@AllAmericanFiveRadio15 жыл бұрын
Very nice demo, very useful information. I need to get a head demagnetizer I gave mine away many years ago.
@UrbnBarz3 жыл бұрын
Very good tutorial in a field of very bad information. Thank you so much.
@EzeeLinux14 жыл бұрын
@localdummiesguy I'm glad the video helped. Please let me know how the machine does after a good cleaning. :) JC
@EzeeLinux13 жыл бұрын
@Mico284 The tape has either gotten overheated and is damaged or the transformer in the amp partially erased it with its magnetic field. There's not much that you can do to fix it but you should try playing it back in as many decks as you can get your hands on and which ever one gives the best image should be used to get a copy of the tape. :) JC
@nwj24683 жыл бұрын
Thanks! It fixed my Yamaha K-60 cassette deck that was eating tapes. The rollers were pretty ugly but they cleaned up well.
@kristy615 Жыл бұрын
Im sadly reminded that Radio shack is gonnne Great video thank you!
@passsacaglia6 ай бұрын
Nice! I have a B&O Beocord 5000 cassette player and it worked perfectly just some months ago then I haven't used it. Just moved it. For some reason when I turn it on, now the capstan is spinning when power on? and when I press in a tape it tries to play and 1 sec after it just shuts off? Any idea why?? All the best!
@ayseeisnothere15 күн бұрын
Should I unplug the deck before demagnetizing or does it matter?
@ROCKGRINDER123 жыл бұрын
August 2021 and I use and love audio cassette tapes, I record all my "old school of heavy metal bands " (end of the 60s to middle of the 70s) and N.W.O.B.H.M. bands (1979 to 1985) onto cassettes and they sound great and loud (too bad for my neighbours).
@vietNguyen.3 жыл бұрын
Can I use normally alcohol too ???
@opheliamoonstone11 жыл бұрын
*winding the tape around them. I was worried it might be a bad belt which is something I had no idea how to fix, but thanks to you I'm pretty sure I just need to clean it... My radio hack ca
@thesemenincident15 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the demagnetizer tips! I was always a bit concerned about how to do it properly... Do you have any brand/model suggestions?
@EzeeLinux14 жыл бұрын
@MrChroissant Sounds like a mechanical issue. You'll have to pull the player out and open it up to see what's going on. The cleaning process s the same for car players. It's a bit more of a pain, though, since you have to drag the whole thing out of the dash to get to it. You can use a wet cleaning tape to maintain it but you gotta yank it and really clean it once in a while. :) JC
@EzeeLinux15 жыл бұрын
I like this one... I got it from MCM Electronics. Radio Shack used to make some nice one's too. I see them on eBay every now and then but the new ones are relatively cheap and one like this should last you a lifetime. :) JC
@jagdishtewani35765 ай бұрын
Hi Joe, when I play a casette the sound is garbled. What can I do to make it sound normal ?
@brig.43988 жыл бұрын
2009 Radio Shack still had a lot of neat stuff, nowdays my Radio Shack is getting rid of a lot of things it's not the same store anymore since Sprint took them over.
@abeleballestri6127 жыл бұрын
Nice demonstration how to clean a cassette tape head and erase mechanism. Thanks very much.
@EzeeLinux14 жыл бұрын
@neantradical Since only one track is giving you trouble, I would say the heads are very dirty or there is a misalignment between the erase head and the record/play head. Demagnetizing is a good thing to do but I don't think it will solve the problem. Heavily magnetized heads have a tendency to add noise to tape and can actually partially erase a tape after several plays... They ordinarily do not prevent a machine from erasing tape completely. Clean the heads and see if that helps. :) JC
@EzeeLinux14 жыл бұрын
@MacPhantom You can get a wet system cleaning cassette to do regular cleanings. That way, you'll only have to open up the deck every once in a while to clean it. That's how I maintain the tape deck in the car. :) JC
@drutgat213 жыл бұрын
Just a few additions: 1. When demagnetizingdegaussing make sure that you are nowhere near speakers, audio equipment, credit cards or anything else that can be affected by the magnetic field of a demagnetizer (take your wallet out of your pocket, and leave it in another room!) 2. One should run the demagnetizer over the transport mechanism in one direction (the direction of travel of the tape)..... 3. Tape cleaning fluid can dry out the rubber roller - specific cleaners are available.
@Techrewinds2 жыл бұрын
vinyl is a trend right now but im sure tape will have a strong comeback in the near future
@Whitenoisegreg14 жыл бұрын
So it IS safe to touch the heads with the demagnitizer? I have a bunch home recording books and the verdict is uncertain. Some say get it as close as you can, others say touch the head. I have a similar RS demagnitizer and it has the same red rubber tip. I recently bought it on ebay and I have a few machines I need to demagnitize.
@delraydetroit3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. I would like to note that isopropyl alcohol has a limited shelf life and if a really old, opened container of it is used, it might be something more like acetone than alcohol.
@Musicradio77Network3 жыл бұрын
I have two reel-to-reel tape recorders including my Akai 1721W and my Concord 220T and it plays great, and the heads are getting low and very hissy. But I don’t have my head demagnetizer yet, but I will someday.
@EzeeLinux14 жыл бұрын
Distilled water would not dissolve the binder that comes off of the tape. You must use a solvent to get that to move. :) JC
@EzeeLinux13 жыл бұрын
@airconguy1 You can find kits with an assortment of belts on the web. Replacing the belt is probably your best option. :) JC
@Kevin-vq6rv5 жыл бұрын
I know that this video is 10 years old now but still... Like you, I'm a tape head too. Yet, I'm more in the studio multitrack recorders. However, I want to do some experiments with cassettes. Can I use my HAN-D-MAG demagnetizer for demagnetizing the heads of a cassette recorder too or is it possible that the HAN-D-MAG is too strong?
@EzeeLinux5 жыл бұрын
They are all basically the same... I think it should be fine. :)
@natheria49334 жыл бұрын
Lol i dont have a demagnetizer, and I only have 50 percent Iso alcohol. Just bought a mercury solid state cassette recorder that im using as a portable player, and recording audio from my computer onto empty cassettes i have. The cassettes im using are relatively new. Sony CD-IT Slide Case High Bias. Im not much of a knowledgeable person in these fields. I dont have much info on the cassette recorder other then what is written on it cause i bought it at a flea market. However, it is still capable of rewinding, fast forwarding, and playing tapes. However i think something is wrong with the heads that are moving the tape because it bogs down when i tries to play. I have been rewinding and fast forwarding it alot because im trying to record music onto the tapes, so i think i might be wearing it out. Does anyone have any suggestions to help me with this? Should I not use 50 percent iso alcohol? What are some other things i can do for it?
@Greenballed12 жыл бұрын
Good vid. Usefull info. I have an echoplex EP3 I need to do this to. I found the exact demagnetizer you have for $9 on Amazon.
@EzeeLinux13 жыл бұрын
@JDTV1995 Cleaning never hurts. Your recording issue is most likely a mechanical or electronics problem, though. :) JC
@opheliamoonstone11 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. I bought a boom box on eBay identical to one I had as a kid out of pure nostalgia. The decks work, but the pinch rollers were sticky and were win
@kksjobfindermalayalam9244 жыл бұрын
Sir it is realy great and informative thanks a lot l have a double cassette Deck and even now l am using it very comfortably
@reversepolarity80663 жыл бұрын
cool video!
@MacPhantom14 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for this video! I’ll have to clean my tape deck (a Technics from a small stereo system "SC-HD 350“), and now I know how to do it. I hope it’ll work, because the tape deck sounds VERY muffled (there’s no more treble in the sound). The deck, however, is closed up and it has like a slot-loading interface, so I’ll have to open it up…
@andresu.35412 жыл бұрын
Hello, I have a problem...When I play a cassette there is some distortion that comes from the right speaker on side A but side B plays perfectly. What can I do to eliminate that distortion?Thanks.
@Peter7Paul14 жыл бұрын
great video, thanks for the info. Great voice/narration too.
@EzeeLinux14 жыл бұрын
Thanks! The Sony would be a good choice as long as the noise level is low enough. Sometimes you'll get hum or buzz in the signal from portable machines. If you have access to more than one cassette machine, I'd plug them all in and see which one sounds best. A mono player would be good if your family tapes were recorded in mono... There are a few mono portables on the market now that you can get for cheap. You may want to consider getting one of those. :) JC
@gondolagripes16745 жыл бұрын
My tape player in my car sounds muffled on one side only, but the other side sounds fine. It's a 1986 Toyota cressida. Would doing this get rid of that muffled/quieted sound.
@EzeeLinux5 жыл бұрын
A good cleaning never hurts. You may not need to worry about demagnetizing it, though. Car players never record and they're inside metal cases. :)
@olderngod14 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this demonstration. I am elderly and have a hearing problem, and I appreciate your perfect diction. So few people know how to speak these days. I have several tape decks and have always maintained them with the denatured alcohol cleaning and the cleaning cassette. They sound fine. If i'm having no problems, is there any need to demagnetize? I have a bit of a tremor in my right hand and would be scaared of doing more harm than good with a demagnetizer!
@EzeeLinux14 жыл бұрын
@neantradical Aliening erase heads is tricky... I'd just start looking for a new machine because if it constantly slipping out of whack that's an indication of a mechanical weakness in the system and it will just keep doing it. :) JC
@katrinapricevo Жыл бұрын
Joe, I have an old JVC boombox from the 1980s and it is making a funny noise when I try to play a cassette tape in it. I tried alcohol on a cotton swab and there is no difference. What else can I do to try and make it sound better? I can hear the audio on the tape playing but the noise overpowers it.
@EzeeLinux Жыл бұрын
No clue. I can't hear what you're talking about about. You might want to take it to a tech and have it looked at or just find a refurbished deck. The machines are getting old now and they do funny things. :)
@EzeeLinux13 жыл бұрын
@btown2011 Acetone was recommended for some early recorders that had all metal parts in the tape path bu8t it will eat a modern machines plastic parts. You really don't need to demag for each recording. Once a year is plenty. :) JC
@neantradical14 жыл бұрын
allright i'll look for a new one, thanks a lot JC! Ben
@billy78897 жыл бұрын
So if I can ask a question, I've got a Portastudio 424 MKIII. Works great, but channels 3-4 have big problems with recording and playback. Almost no sound at all, no matter what I do with with the channel faders and master volume. I'm new, do I need to just clean the heads do think?
@thebreretons10 жыл бұрын
Your Teac machine used AC erase and AC bias but the deck you used for your demonstration uses DC erase and DC bias, making demagnetising pointless. During record the DC erase head magnetically saturates the tape thus erasing it, the DC bias (with audio signal superimposed) applied to the record head takes the tape out of magnetic saturation while adding the audio signal, that's why the polarity of the connections to the record head (using DC bias) was important, if the polarity was reversed you would get poor or no audio playback. Magnetised heads are usually microphonic if tapped with something non magnetic or when cleaning with a Q-tip.
@EzeeLinux10 жыл бұрын
This Radio Shack machine is AC bias. They made some very nice portable recorders in the late 70's and early 80's. This is one of them. :)
@thebreretons10 жыл бұрын
Joe Collins Sorry, my mistake, I was so used to seeing similar machines using DC bias and it was a long time ago !!
@wilfredheggart6475 жыл бұрын
mine is a panasonic slime line my brother bought it for me because i am pregnant
@EzeeLinux14 жыл бұрын
@Vinylrecordsneverdie No! Acetone is way to corrosive for tape heads! It's fine for pulleys and other parts but heads are delicate and acetone will deform and permanently etch the relatively soft plastic parts in most erase heads. Nail polish remover is also loaded with perfumes and other additives... Pure or 91 % Isopropyl is best. It's your machine but I strongly advise not using acetone or any other strong solvent on the heads... :) JC
@caniuu_51493 жыл бұрын
Hello, I had a problem and it is that the recorder of my Sanyo ja 389 stopped recording tapes, let me explain: I was going to record a tape, and to check that the input level was correct, I tried to record without a tape inside by pressing the switch that allows you to start recording and thus be able to monitor the volume levels on the panel so that they do not reach the red zone. After that, I tried to record the cassette, but it doesn't spin, it just appears as recording. Pressing play does reproduce the sound, just as when recording, even if the cassette is not rotated, the recorder outputs the audio itself from the input (the one I tried to record on the cassette). The only way I can get the cassette to turn when I record is to hit play on the second deck, but all it does is erase the sound. What do you think may be the problem? I disassembled the device and observed what it did, and the only thing that I have been able to appreciate is that the tape does not rotate when recording when two copper metal parts make contact (if you lightly pressed the record key if you move the pulleys). This contact seems to have some function and is intentional, but I can't figure out what is preventing the tape from being recorded. The day before if I was able to record and there was no problem, I just suspect that I may have damaged the player trying to record without a cassette inside. I hope that with all this information you can help me, thank you
@EzeeLinux3 жыл бұрын
You either need to have a technician look at the machine or you need to find a new one. That could be a logic issue, bad belts or something else.
@abboracing11 жыл бұрын
great info JC. At work we repair data recording tape drives. Most of them currently use a ceramic hear with iron or ferite cores. Theses are seriously tiny. Wuold this help with high error rates? Also, could a tape deegousser be used to demagnatise the read write heads?
@jacobsowflo39078 жыл бұрын
Hi joe, thank you for your video. I cleaned my YAMAHA MT4X Multitrack Cassette Recorder with hopes that it would fix the "high pitch buzz" (not feedback) sound that exists when I playback any and all cassette tape. A high frequency sits slightly louder than the music being played back. Unfortunately, cleaning my heads didn't fix my issue. I recently bought this 4track mixer from eBay... Please tell me I didn't get duped! Ha Much thanks, JW3
@Santoshlv4263 жыл бұрын
Can Methylated spirit be used instead of alcohol ? What about spraying the heads with Electronic Contact Cleaner ?
@EzeeLinux3 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't.
@movementent8 жыл бұрын
Hi there. I have a Pioneer CT-1080R and a Teac V-30 cassette deck. After I cleaned the heads, the pinch rollers and the capstans (I'm using 70% Isopropyl alcohol for this) and letting them dry, my tapes sound very raspy on these decks, although I did notice some cracks on the pinch rollers. I don't know what I'm doing wrong. Any advice?
@sirmelancholia4 жыл бұрын
So, am I demagnetizing a 4-track or disassembling a live bomb?
@mistaUHOH2154 жыл бұрын
exactly how I feel
@suncookrocks4 жыл бұрын
Cut the red wire first.
@teerawatimsomang54498 жыл бұрын
if i demagnetize my tape player it does make sound better? and can i use a cleaner cassette that come with demagnetize head? it will be good?
@nikifosu8 жыл бұрын
Hello, This is very informative video about cleaning your heads and parts. What is the model's name of your demagnetizer in this video? Can you provide the brand mane of this tool and the link where I can find this tool. Can I use the same demagnetizer for my Nakamichi CR2 and Uher CG356 Thanks for your help
@1984318i12 жыл бұрын
Hey thanks a lot! My music doesn't sound like it's being played under water anymore.
@neantradical14 жыл бұрын
@BadEditPro yes i think its a desalignement too, one day i dropped it to the ground and it did the same thing, i dropped it at the local shop so he repair it, then it was cool and then after a lot of time it started back to go wrong, is it easy to re-align it myself, or should i just get a new one or make it repair again? thanks.
@manFromPeterborough4 жыл бұрын
I've had mysterious faults in stereo tape decks that leave rhythmic soft popping noise on RH tracks of tapes played through that deck, it only audible on blank portion of tape, so why would a unit like this infect a recording ? the same tape will still produce this noise on other players so the faulty deck actually imprints these nuisance sounds on the tape as it is played. the first pass produces the noise audibly, if you run it without a tape nothing is heard, possibly there may be static coming from erase head. this was a top load Sanyo cassette deck
@javierlynch70003 жыл бұрын
hi joe, hope you read this and could help me. since I'm a 25-year-old dummy, and just starting to learn and collect cassette tapes which is why I don't know much about it. I've bought a portable cassette player and had the brilliant idea of cleaning it, (after changing belts and cleaning it). anyways, I've cleaned the pinch roll and the head with alcohol 70% (thinking it was 99%) and also cleaned a cassette tape with all the q tip and rewind technique, and now that cassette tape (and only that one) plays at a fluctuating speed, iv tried other cassettes and the same player and the speed is constant, but the one wich cleaned wrong doesn't, it even gets stuck sometimes. I hope you could help me fix this problem since is an important tape that my mom gave me from her younger age stuff. and sorry for the bad English, I'm still learning it.
@printz00712 жыл бұрын
May 2022 and still watching
@COH200012 жыл бұрын
You are actually touching the head with the demagnetizing tool? I have a 3 head Akai, and the same demagnetizer. Seems like the instruction said don't touch the head but rather hover and move the tool in a circular motion. AKAI 870-D. I'm confused.
@user-mh5sl7ik3t6 жыл бұрын
I did this and waited for about 30 to 45 min for it to dry and than I put in a cassette but some light bububu noise could be heard so I figured maybe its not dry yet so waited for 3 hours and the noise was gone but I am worried did it damage my cassette ? I played the same around 30 sec part a couple of times ! everyone on the internet said to wait about 5-10 min so I don't know maybe its nothing ? Please put my mind at ease .... its a very important cassette ! Its the only thing that has my fathers voice since he passed away !