some nice refurbished Nakamichi sometimes available at decent prices....you might want to make sure the tapes are still good before you spend money...sometimes they decay badly, physically and sonically...
Good cassette player?
I FINALLY found a box of tapes that I lost about 10 years ago. Tons of late night college radio I recorded in the early 90s.
I have no idea whats going on with cassette players. Can anyone recommend one which has a decent noise floor and good output for sampling? (XLR? Toslink?) Time to digitize these and post online :)
thanks in advance!
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Dear @clustrocasual : This one is a VERTY FINE DESIGN AND YOU CAN FIND OUT SECOND HAND PROBABLY THROUGH EBAY, page 58:
https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Audio/Archive-Audio/80s/Audio-1984-09.pdf
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
As long as the tapes were good quality, TDK, Maxell, etc. they should play fine. If they were cheap Radio Shack or other cheap ones, all bets are off. I was always a Nak fan, and would agree that getting a used Nak would be a good idea, (since you can be sure they have been well taken care of). But you should digitalize them as soon as possible by recording direct to a PC. Lots of adapters on Amazon and other sites you can buy. |
I'm listening to a tape (Sony Super Metal Master)made 2 decades ago, Bill Evans Waltz for Debby, on my Tandberg 3014A. It still amazes me how good a lowly cassette tape can sound. I'm a Tandberg enthusiast so I'm a bit biased, but the imaging and soundstaging of Tandberg is superior to other decks I've owned in the past. |
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