best consumer/prosumer RTR?

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cactuseskimo

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I don't want to invest the money in an expensive one yet. I will be running my computer mixes out into it, and then back onto the computer, but want to experiment to see if this is my worth my time and money before dropping a few hundred.

I guess a 2 track machine would be best as a stereo track is all I need. There seems to be a lot of fairly cheap sony's and akai's on ebay . . . thoughts???
 
The tascam 22-2 is great unit for this and can be had for cheap on ebay.
They usualy go for less than 100.00.
 
If you can take the time to shop carefully, and, admittedly, have a bit of luck too, then you can find a Revox A77 in very good to excellent condition for very little. I got a very good high-speed, half-track A77 for under $100 including shipping. The Revox won't limit you to 7" reels, and if you plan on running at 15ips, that can be a big benefit. They are built like tanks, very precise tanks. Documentation is pretty widely available, very thorough, and pretty inexpensive. They have a well deserved reputation for legendary reliability. Their performance and specifications are excellent, even by modern standards. Disadvantage: parts are expensive, although worth it. Also, the transport is controlled via relays. Yep, relays, not logic control circuits. Thus, you don't go directly from FF to play unless you want to clean up the mess and lose the tape it will spew out. Anyway, any engineer worth his salt knows how to "rock the tape" on these older machines.

What you will wind up with is basically a "baby Studer," and you can't go wrong with that. Note that the B77 series has essentially the same specs, but tends to cost a lot more. I guess some folks just have to have the logic controlled transport and are willing to pay more to get it. The B77 is not as reliable as the A77, though.

You can get the same improvement as having the built-in Dolby noise reduction just by using a modern tape, like 3M 996 (my favorite), or GP-9, Emtec 900, etc. Note also that the A77s with the built-in Dolby tend to sell for considerably higher prices, so the best buy would be a HS/2 track unit and use +9 type tape.
 
Hey guys, thanks for the replys. I will read up on them. Any more suggestions?
 
I agree with Herm. :cool:
Tascam 22-2 is simple to use, great sound and you have both 7-1/2 and 15 speed + if you need new parts from Teac they still have most in stock.
A very good starter deck to become a "analog-addict"

Good Luck :cool:
 
Vintage TX said:
I agree with Herm. :cool:
Tascam 22-2 is simple to use, great sound and you have both 7-1/2 and 15 speed + if you need new parts from Teac they still have most in stock.
A very good starter deck to become a "analog-addict"

Good Luck :cool:

Thanks, the revox A77 is intriguing, but I think I'll probably pick up the 22-2. Like you guys have said, cheap, good features, and parts and documentation seem readily available.
 
The Tascam 32 is going for NZ$100-200 here, so it might be within your price range. From what I've read its better than the 22-2, but of these two I've only ever used the 32.

I'm really skeptical of the A77, I have used them and they have never really impressed me (the last time was 1990, so they're 15-16 years older now!). I'm guessing your chances of striking a 30 year old A77 in the same condition as a 15-20 year old 32 aren't that great.

The B77 is a different beast and when I last used one (in 1992) I thought it was quite a nice unit.

Also loved the Tascam BR20 but it will probably be out of your price range :)
 
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