Grateful Dead Hour Shows: Transferred to CD's??


I have about 50 Grateful Dead Hour shows on tape recorded off of FM. They were all recorded on a Nakamichi LX-3, and many shows were recorded using Dolby "B" Unfortunately, the LX-3 is too bulky to transport, and also too expensive to ship (30 lbs boxed) I could buy either a used a Nakamichi BX-1 or BX-2 after I move and settle in, but I would have to find one in good condition

Therefore, my question is: could these tapes be tranferred to CD's, possibly even cleaned up or even re-equalized. BTW, many of the tapes offer some of the Dead's best performance over the years; some are just OK.

Unfortunately, it may be very expensive to professionally transfer the tapes. And I don't know if there are any quality "tape to CD" machines out there for sale. I really don't want to buy a transcription component that I will use only for a short period. ANY SUGGESTIONS WILL BE GREATLY APPRECIATED' Thanks, Jim

sunnyjim
I wasn't suggesting that you buy anything to do the transfers yourself. Rather, I was leading you to sources where the shows you have on cassettes are most likely are available in a digital form and from a source of better quality than yours.

Www.archive.org is an online digital depository for live concerts. There are hundreds of bands and tens of thousands of hours of live concerts available there for free. Some are soundboards. Some are professional multitracking mixes and others are audience recordings. The Grateful Dead has the largest collection and most likely what you recorded off fm is available from a source closer to our from the master.

Also, if you can't find it there I may have it and could copy it for you. I've been collecting and taping the Dead for a very long time.

I sold the Mitsubhuhi, and, yes I had mine modified, too. I've also found that radio is of such poor quality that I don't care to listen to it either.
To me it seems like shipping your cassette player would be the cheapest option. But if that's not doable, I don't see why you can't connect your cassette deck directly to a stand alone CD burner. That's always been a pretty good way to record LP's, so I don't see why Cassettes would be any different. One other things that's very important, is if you do end up getting a new cassette deck after you move, you'll really need to get one that has an azimuth adjustment. If you don't match the position of the heads to the cassette deck that made the recording, playback on a different deck will sound very dull.
Raymondo and Zd542.... Thank you both for the advice. Ray if I need a particular GD show that I can't find, I will give you a shout.

ZD542. I am not that computer savvy, but I wish I had known about transferring by using a CD burner to transfer the tapes, I still have the tapes, but the Nakamichi LX-3 is gone. I just did not want to ship it with the rest of the load, so I gave it to a young guy who likes to tape local Hawaiian musicians off of FM..... Aloha for now!!!
"ZD542. I am not that computer savvy, but I wish I had known about transferring by using a CD burner to transfer the tapes"

Just to clarify, I was talking about an audio component type CD burner, not the ones that are in a PC. Also, I forgot to mention another possible solution. They make cassette decks specifically designed for what you need to do. Do a search for "digital cassette tape converter", and you'll see what I talking about.
SunnyJim-

where are you located?
Perhaps, there is a local radio station (college preferred) or transcriptionist that may be of asssitance?
Keep us posted and Happy Listening!