I
Igor Alexander
Member
Hello all.
I recently bought a few 2-track open reel tape recorders and while I was there, noticed that the guy was also selling a pair of Otari MTR12-mk2 1/2" 4-tracks. These are extremely heavy, professional machines on rollaround stands.
The guy got them from an educational establishment that threw them out and he doesn't seem to know anything about them.
He didn't have a reel of 1/2" tape to test them, so I did a quick visual inspection.
While passing over the heads with a flashlight, I noticed that the erase heads on one had some noticeable damage (they might've been shot) and the record headstack on the other had a slight nick.
I take it scratched heads are a definite no-no, since they will abrade the tape. Is a scratched headstack ready for the garbage, or can it be repaired by having it "relapped"?
What is involved with replacing the heads on professional machines such as these? I noticed screws arranged in a rectangle around the head area of the machine; can the entire "head assembly" be removed and sent in? If so, when the assembly is returned and put back on the machine, is it necessary for a technician to have access to the entire machine in order to do a physical alignment? Should that be the case, it would be big factor against owning one of these machines, since they are way too heavy and bulky to be economically transported anywhere, and I don't know that any of the rare technicians around here that still do analog will make housecalls.
I think these machines would be fun to have in my home studio, provided they work and aren't going to be a money pit.
The guy is asking for $400 each, which to me seems quite high for untested machines of no particular repute in a track configuration that no one cares about in a world where analog is practically dead.
Whaddya think -- should I pass on these machines at the prices he's asking, or should I move on to the next stage and buy a 1/2" reel of tape (at $90+) to try them out?
I recently bought a few 2-track open reel tape recorders and while I was there, noticed that the guy was also selling a pair of Otari MTR12-mk2 1/2" 4-tracks. These are extremely heavy, professional machines on rollaround stands.
The guy got them from an educational establishment that threw them out and he doesn't seem to know anything about them.
He didn't have a reel of 1/2" tape to test them, so I did a quick visual inspection.
While passing over the heads with a flashlight, I noticed that the erase heads on one had some noticeable damage (they might've been shot) and the record headstack on the other had a slight nick.
I take it scratched heads are a definite no-no, since they will abrade the tape. Is a scratched headstack ready for the garbage, or can it be repaired by having it "relapped"?
What is involved with replacing the heads on professional machines such as these? I noticed screws arranged in a rectangle around the head area of the machine; can the entire "head assembly" be removed and sent in? If so, when the assembly is returned and put back on the machine, is it necessary for a technician to have access to the entire machine in order to do a physical alignment? Should that be the case, it would be big factor against owning one of these machines, since they are way too heavy and bulky to be economically transported anywhere, and I don't know that any of the rare technicians around here that still do analog will make housecalls.
I think these machines would be fun to have in my home studio, provided they work and aren't going to be a money pit.
The guy is asking for $400 each, which to me seems quite high for untested machines of no particular repute in a track configuration that no one cares about in a world where analog is practically dead.
Whaddya think -- should I pass on these machines at the prices he's asking, or should I move on to the next stage and buy a 1/2" reel of tape (at $90+) to try them out?