Cassette Deck??


Hello All
I found an old box of cassettes I have from the 80's while doing some moving and thought I would like to give them a listen. Can anyone tell me a decent deck I can pick up to add to my system so I can give them a listen? Don't want to spend a lot its just a passing phase. Any ideas and where I might find something? Let me know.
Thanks
harnellt
I just picked up an old Marantz cassette deck at an estate sale. Had to buy some new belts to install in it, and for about 20 bucks I'm set. I only had 1 cassette tape so I went to Goodwill and picked up a surprising variety of great music to listen to for 59 cents each. Some sound excellent, others very compressed. It was fun going through the process, and it will now go to the basement system for an occasional listen. It may be stone age fodder, but it put a smile on my face.
Great comment, Abucktwoeighty! I have been advocating that
same experience on most "cassete-oriented" threads, but I
always get blasted for it. Many believe that vinyl is the
only analog medium worth exploring. They're wrong! As you pointed out, thrift stores sell cassettes cheap.Rasputin's and Amoeba (SF Bay area) also routinely blow them out at 4/1$. Many are brand new, and sound like it. I bought a
still-sealed cassette of Sinatra's "Nice and Easy" album and it made me realize how right I have been about the
sound of a well-recorded cassette on a Nakamichi deck.
How many of those decks can you still get parts for. I don't believe the Revox uses belts, and the way it's built will keep it in spec for a long time. Can anyone comment on the Revox?
Revox is very good and sounds somewhat different than Nakamichi. There are still places that service and repair them. Usually you can get one in good condition on ebay for about $500. I see no reason to use them instead of Nak.
Now, there are couple of Studer cassette decks that use better heads and all balanced in/out. They are rare and might be worth the attention. Expensive to buy and maintain.

I have a two Nakamichi BX-125 decks, two BX-300's, CR-5A & CR-7A and taped mega amounts in the 80's & 90's. Mostly, if not all, Grateful Dead bootlegs.

The BX-125's were my slave decks for sharing the music. Man, I would make about 20-30 copies a week for people and never ONCE had problems with any of them.

Sadly and happily, I am a FLAC guy now and my 2000+ Dead tapes sit quietly in a closet.


Loved my NAK's