terry9
In any event, if you want to be serious about analog tape, reel-to-reel is the way to go.
Not an archival medium? Depends. Cheap stuff, 120 minutes, agreed. Metal Type 4, 60 minutes duration, absolutely disagree.The facts speak for themselves. You can’t get flat frequency response to 20K on cassette at 0 dB - when cassette manufacturers cited FR specs, it was typically at -20dB.
Me too!
I have tapes made 20 years ago that sound fine.
Tapes don’t degrade; vinyl does, at least on most real-world systems.Tape most certainly does degrade. For example, where do you think that gunk comes from that must be cleaned from your tape heads, capstan and tape guides? A well-cared for LP will last for generations. Of course, they have to be stored properly, and played properly - but the same is true of tape. I have some LPs that date to the early 60s, and they play like new.
In any event, if you want to be serious about analog tape, reel-to-reel is the way to go.