Best looking reel to reel


I’m looking for a really cool looking reel to reel. Something super gnarly, like the TEAC from Pulp Fiction. What are your favorite choices?
defiantboomerang
Studer for the ultimate in techno quality. For design quality I think there were also some Braun models designed by Dieter Rams. Nothing has ever come close for esthetic beauty.
The consumer models by Studer are cool looking too---the Revox A77, B77, and A700. For the pro look, Crown's are impressive. All of these make the Teac look like the mass-market recorder it was. All of these also possess excellent sound quality, if that matters to you!

Dokoder, & Crown used to be quite the rage. I saw RTR merely as tools. To put a ‘face’ onto them just add metal reels, or those whose appearance is not routine.
Why don't you tell us what looks the best to you?  Google "reel to reel tape deck" and go to "images".

For me, different hubs and reels can transform the look of the machine.
Wouldn't it be more prudent to invest in something that sounds good as opposed to something that looks cool? Just a thought.
Sadly, finding something that sounds good is the easy part these days. Any decent handheld solid state digital recorder will sound better than even the Studer. The beauty of these old recorders is their refined mechanical quality, and the look and feel that comes with that.
It is for the same nostalgic reason that I have not yet sold my LP12 turntable with its classically beautiful  SME arm, or my old analogue Nikons.
The SME III w/ slightly S-shaped super light titanium nitride wand is just beautiful, also the finest pivot arm for the most compliant cartridges ever produced, from the Golden Age of Vinyl. Period.
Mine is the SME 3009 series II improved. The later series III is a better arm, but for looks I still think it is trumped by the series II. And the V15iii MR was a great cartridge with vastly superior tracking (sadly no longer supported). Even so, the arrival of digital represented a clear improvement.
I have one of those super gnarly reel to reel tape decks by Teac.  And as a bonus it has a super retro eight track built into it too!
I'd sell it...
Appearance? Tandberg 9000 series or Revox A700. Or really ugly (to me) Technics US series, like 1500US. With aftermarket electronics the Revox was special.
For 'studied cool', the Revox A77...sleek. simple.....

For 'heartbeat serious', the Crown decks of the same era.

If 'cost? What's that?', multi-track studio decks...pick one....

....and who are you trying to impress, anyway? *L*
OMG, those United reels are so ghetto! Too much bling for this white boy.
Pioneer 909 - I have one, along with an Akai and a Sony! Fun to play with, but not easy to get 7 1/2 IPS recorded tapes!
For me a Revox B77 Mk 11, high speed. Sold my mint condition, fully serviced, one 10 years ago. Another stupid HiFi mistake I still regret.
There's so many cool looking R2R, I especially like the vertical standing models. Revox PR99 MKII, Tascam BR-20, Technics RS-1500, Akai 747, Studer A807 and A810.
The reels and NAB adapters makes a big difference, these I call audio jewelry, up to you on how blingy you wanna get with these accessories.
IMO, the big Crown recorders with their large, black, bakelite knobs, are the quintessence of the art deco/industrial age.  Next, or on the same plane, would be the Studers and Ampex studio recorders.  If TEAC is your ideal, then maybe you don't want that look; you want TEAC/Akai/Technics/Sony.  Among the Japanese decks, Otari comes closest to the big three in appearance and perhaps in performance when properly tweaked, IMO. 
My vote would have to go to the one I had back in the late 70s, the Pioneer RT-707. It might not be the gnarliest, but it just may have been the most unusual looking.

https://www.hifiengine.com/images/model/pioneer_rt-707_open_reel_tape_deck.jpg
I'm going to echo route-66 here a little. Pioneer made a higher end version of the 707 called the RT-909. If you're into chrome it should push all the right buttons.
The Technics RS-1500 series, especially one rehabbed by J-Corder in Gig Habour, WA.
As a teenager in the 80's, the 2 machines I dreamt of owning were the Technics RS-1500, or the Teac X-2000M.  I had neither the funds nor good reason to own one at the time... but now I do, and had just had a Technics 1500 refurbished by J-corder.   It's very cool and sounds amazing.
One thing to really consider is whether you want a 2-track or 4-track deck.  The consumer machines are 4-track, and play the tape in both directions.  Pro 2-track machines only play the tape in one direction, but use the entire tape width for better S/N ratio.  Some decks, like the Technics, have 2 play heads to play either type of recording, but it only can record 2-track.  
Both machines, I think, look pretty gnarly! 
Otari and Revox were my faves, now I wouldn't mind having one of the United Audio rebuilt Teacs as they supposedly sound great with outboard power supplies and all that, but still…reel to reel seems too fussy these days, and expensive.
Evidently, most of you guys never saw a big Crown recorder in the flesh.  I never would have either, were it not for the fact that my first boss owned four of them, and he mounted them side by side by side by side on a single long shelf along one wall of his listening area.  Very very impressive, especially since he also had one room of his house dedicated to the shelving of his first-gen master tapes, which filled that whole room, floor to ceiling.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but it's my understanding that the Crowns really didn't sound that good.  Very rugged and easily repaired, but sonics were sub par compared to Ampex, Studer, etc.
That was my impression also, onhwy61. The Crown’s had great transports, but their electronics had a bit of a hard, transistor glare. Poor parts, or mediocre design? I don't know, but Revox's just sound better.
Otari all the way, one of THE most elegant pieces that ever graced my home .