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The Tascam 38 is a great, fat sounding 1/2" 8-track, that was designed and optimized for the "serious" home recording market (of the time). It's hard to go wrong with such a simple and solid deck. Dbx noise reduction is an external option.
(Not mentioned, is)... The Tascam 48 is another 1/2" 8-track, that's the same generation as the 38, 'cept with a lot more heavy duty and pro-oriented in features. (Dbx optional).
(Not mentioned, is)...
The Tascam 58 is another 1/2" 8-track deck, that's even a cut above the 48 on pro features. (Dbx optional).
(Not mentioned, is)...
The Tascam TSR-8 is the more modern successor to the 38, and is a little more high-techy and loaded on some features, while simultaneous cutting corners on some things 38 may owners take for granted. The TSR-8 has built in dbx NR, and fairly good locate and sync options.
(Not mentioned, is)...
The Tascam ATR-60/8, was Tascam's top-topline 1/2" reel 8-track, that says "pro" all the way. (Dbx optional).
Beg yer pardon, Ghost,... but...
The Fostex R8 is an 8-in/8-out 1/4" 8-track reel recorder, that will record 8-tracks simultaneously. The R-8 has sync/locate features. The R-8 was one of Fostex's topline 8-tracks, (second only to the E-8).
(Not mentioned, is)... The Fostex E-8 is the big-daddy of 1/4" 8-track R/R's, that is the only Fostex 1/4" 8-track to sport 10.5" (large) reels. (All the other Fostex 8-trackers sport the smaller 7" reels). The E-8 has 8-in/8-out/8-simul record capability, and advanced of locate/sync features. The E-8 is seen less often, but is a big upgrade to the R-8-class of recorders.
(Not mentioned, is)...
the Fostex Model 80, which is another 1/4" 8-track R/R, that's just one generation older than the R8.
The oldest Fostex 8-track reel deck is the A-8. The A-8 is where the entire line of Fostex 1/4" 8-track reel decks for home recording began. The A-8 is the same vintage as the Tascam 38, but the A-8 has 4-inputs and 8-outputs, and therefore will only record 4-tracks simultaneously, (max).
The nex-gen revision of the A-8 was the Fostex A-8LR, which is a true 8-in/8-out/8-simul recording 1/4" 8-track reel deck. Find the A-8LR as preferable to the A-8, if you can find it at all.
All Fostex 8-track reel decks are Dolby-C NR decks, which has a subtly different characteristic sound to it, as compared to dbx (Tascam). I find dbx a better overall noise supressor, and just a mellower sound, over all.
None of the Fostex 1/4" 8-track reels will sound as fat as a Tascam 1/2" 8-track. Period.
No discussion on the topic of reel-8-tracks would be complete without mention of the Tascam 388. The 388 was Tascam's only entry into the 1/4" 8-track reel field, but it's a fully loaded Portastudio-format deck,... a true all-in-one'r. The 388 with dbx and a highly capable integrated 8x8x2 mixer, somehow places above Fostex 1/4" 8-track reel decks on sound quality. Even though Fostex 1/4" reel decks are 15-ips machines, and the 388 runs at 7.5-ips, the lower tape speed of 7.5-ips seems to work in the 388's advantage, in the net result. The super-high quality mixer section of the 388 is a huge complement in the 388's capability and great sound quality. What's nice about the 388, is that it's a Portastudio format, so it eliminates all the complexity and hassles of outboard mixers and patching.
Post-note: The complementary array of Fostex 8 channel/4-buss mixers were just so-so on quality, as compared to something as topline as the 388's mixer section, the Tascam M-30/M-35,
the Tascam M-300 series, or M-500 series.
All the products mentioned above are satisfactory solutions to 8-track reel analog recording, however, I'm more partial toward Tascam, such as the 38, 388 & TSR-8. The 48 & 58 are a little more "pro" for my needs. In mixers, I'll stick with the Tascam 388, M-30, M-300's, and M-500's, w/the M-520 being a topline
vintage pro mixer. Somehow, I'm more interested in the "pro" M-520, more than I'm interested in the "pro" 58 or ATR-60/8, so go figure.
Most of these decks and mixers may be had on most days for very reasonable bid prices on Ebay. As they always say with this sort of thing, YMMV.
Ghost covers most topics very thoroughly, but I'm known to pop out with a long winded technical memo, on occasion.
That's all I have to say, for now. BBL.
Good luck & have fun.