Can we finally put Reel to Reel out of its misery? Put it to rest people.


The format is dying and too expensive to repair properly. Heads wear out so easy and many out there are all worn.
High quality technicians are either retired or long gone. Its such an inconvenient format that can be equalled by nakamichi easily in tape decks.
Retire it please put them in museums. 
vinny55
In the days when tape and vinyl ruled the roost, the record companies would send a production/distribution master tape to Yugoslavia, South Africa, Mexico or wherever, so that records could be pressed for the local market. In due course, they sent hard discs, and now it gets sent over the internet.

When the record pressing plants closed, as everyone went to CD, the tapes got put in a dumpster/skip, or alternatively people took them away. The record companies had no desire to retrieve all these tapes, as they had nowhere to store them. Anyway, the record companies already had the original multitrack and stereo mix down in a vault.
topoxforddoc,

That is interesting. Giving away "originals" seems unusual for a record company when even hobbyists (as your example here shows) are considering them as good as it gets. Could it be that such a tape was, practically, stolen from the company while nobody was paying much attention? That particular place’s vault was not much of a vault, but it was enthusiastically taken care of. Not that you can find it out now, but it would be interesting to know which ways, and when, did the tape travel before it reached you.

This is, it seems, what you are talking about...

http://www.museumofmastertapereels.org/introduction.html

As you mention, it used to be tapes, then it was hard drives, now it may be Internet. As good as tapes may sound, vinny55 may be right, they are obsolete. Not for hobbyists, for everything else.
Thanks for the welcome! On a publication, if I am not mistaken the National Recording Preservation Board, at the beginning of the new millennium it was estimated that about 80% of human knowledge understood as music, data, writings, etc. it was still recorded and stored in analog form (vinyl records, magnetic tapes, etc.). So the problem for RAI but also for the competition is that of the enormous amount of data to be transferred and that is why they have taken all the available machines out of the warehouses. Furthermore, there are many problems of degradation and poor preservation of analogue media that require very slow and delicate technologies to read them and then digitize them.
Glupson,

I think you have got a bit confused about the "vault". Sony, Warners, BMG all have vast temperature and humidity controlled vaults, where they keep the original multi-track and stereo mix down MASTERS. These never leave the record company.
Copies (in their hundreds) were made by the record company and sent all around the world to record pressing plants. When these record pressing plants went bust in the 80/90s, the copies (production/distribution masters) were just put into skips/dumpsters. Some of these got rescued, preserved, and now find their way onto the market.

Charlie