388 tape heads

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EddieVergunst

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On the Tascam 388, which head is the playback and which is the record head? On mine, the second head, the non-solid metal one, has what appears as alot of oxide buildup (or are they supposed to be of this color?) which I can't seem to get off with alcohol. Am I fucked? As you can see I'm a analog newbie, I didn't even pay any attention to the heads when I bought the machine (stupid, I know)
I have only remixed some old tapes, playback is ok. I haven't recorded anything yet (still no mic).
 
Since the 388 has only two heads the first is the Erase Head, and the second is the Record/Playback head :)
 
cool, thanks.
So is it supposed to have the copper color? As I said I tried cleaning it with alcohol/q-tips, thinking it might be oxide, but I couldn't get it off.
 
Well, my rec/pb head is the same colour, and my 388 works fine. So, unless ARP or GFM pop in to tell us any different, I expect it's meant to be that colour.
 
I don't own a 388 myself but your descriptions of color don't seem quite right to me?

The erase head is normally a whitish/taupe color with black colored strips where the tracks are on the front of the head. I am talking about the head on the left side here. Is this head copper colored?:eek:

The next head is the sync head. This is the one that records and plays back. It is normally a chrome color with black strips on it where the tracks are.

Is the color uniform from top to bottom including the areas above and below where the tape travel? Or, is this discoloring only on the tape path?

If you are trying to remove stubborn oxide that alcohol is not removing, you might want to try using Methanol instead but be very careful with that stuff as it is incredibly flammable and burns invisibly!! Use it in a well ventilated room with windows and doors open and do not smoke in the room while you are doing this or you will be hanging with Elvis!:cool:

Perhaps posting a picture of what you have there would be helpful.

If you have a decent digital camera that has a macro mode to it, you should be able to get within 3 or 4 inches of the heads and put a light on it first. Don't use the flash as that will wash out the picture from that close a distance.

Ordinarily, tape shed and normal oxide has a reddish brown to black color to it. Not a copper color.

If you are playing old tapes that are shedding oxide badly, look into baking the tape in a food dehydrator at about 135 degrees for 3 to 4 hours. This should harden back the binder or glue in the tape that is in a semi-liquid state state and letting the oxide come off on your heads and guides too easily.

Cheers! :)
 
Here are some 388 heads
 

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Thanks for the shot, Herm!

So. They are a copper color. I suspect that they are not in fact copper but most likely bronze or some other alloy mixture.

In any event, a copper color is not consistent with the color of dirt and oxide shedding so all is probably well.

Cheers! :)
 
thanks for all the replies. I'm relieved to see that there's nothing wrong with the heads on mine.

(getting an MD421 in the mail today hopefully, can't wait to try the 388 out)
 
That's interesting.

An MD421 was the first mic I bought after I'd got my 388 (though not the first mic I owned) :cool:
 
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