sweetbeats
Reel deep thoughts...
So I just thought I’d share a little project I’ve allowed myself to fall into, which is usually how it goes…but I’ve had a couple (for me) minor revelations in the process. This is about pinch rollers, and specifically for cassette-based machines…and I’m talking about the common Philips Compact Cassette format. Anyway, it goes like this…prepare yourself for storytime, or feel free to tap or click your browser “back” button and get out while you can
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Sometime in the last year or two…hm…maybe three…I sold the Tascam 424mkII 4-track Portastudio I’d had forever in favor of a 244…much more robust build, easier to work on, potential for better sonics, and nicer aesthetics AFAIC. I traded a rare remote I had for the 244 and sold the 424mkII outright. Turned out two of the head coils were roached on the 244 if you can believe that…but it was otherwise in “okay” shape. Well, what to do…then I saw a pair of semi-basket-case 244s on eBay…there’s my parts donors I thought, and maybe enough I could get a spare up and running and make some money back. So I bought them. $150 shipped IIRC. I set it all aside, and then in the meantime, maybe a year, 18 months ago…something like that…I see on eBay…I need to stop looking…a minty condition 244 in original box for $200 shipped…transport not working. I figure it needs all new rubber, but it had the box and was in REALLY nice condition. So I got it. So there I was quite fully invested in 244s. I really like them…clearly. The construction ideology and components remind me a little of my prototype Tascam console from the same era…I did a little collaborating with a couple friends and analyzed the signal path, identified areas of potential improvement and got this idea of building the ultimate 244…bought a crap-ton of components to do this. And then as a part of that I knew all the transport rubber needed replaced and at that time I stumbled on the fact Athan was making device-specific replacement pinch rollers for cassette-based machines…so I thought I had to have one of those for the “ultimate 244”. So I got one. Now, anybody that knows me knows this is all likely to sit in the closet, attic, various places and eventually I’ll start tinkering on it. Well from time to time I might find a local deal on something that needs work and I’ll buy it and fix it, sometimes keep it, sometimes flip it…I typically have no idea what I’m actually going to do or when. So after all the 244 acquisitions I picked up another 688 (my second…repaired and sold the first), and a 488mkII (my first, though I had a 1st generation 488 that I repaired and sold), and I picked up another 238 (the “$50 238” that’s the subject of this thread starting on post 15: https://homerecording.com/bbs/threads/what-is-it-that-compells-me….415149/…it’s the 3rd 238 I’ve owned…returned the first I ever owned, repaired and sold the 2nd). I repaired and sold 688 #2 and the 488mkII after being reminded of my distaste for the finicky edge tracks, but 238 #3 is still here…it has the full-function remote, is, like, 9/10 condition, has the new capstan servo board I installed…just not ready to let it go. Rubber seemed okay, like, everything works, though track 1 is finicky. Okay…take a breath. So I ALSO have a Tascam 122 (1st generation) that I got years ago…related thread here: https://homerecording.com/bbs/threads/tascam-122-story.402165/. I got it so I had something to play all my cassettes from back in the day…huge box of them…lots of gigs recorded on cassette…would like to archive them someday. The 122 was a little beat up and transport non-functional, which I figured I could fix, but with these detriments it was cheap…I think $60 shipped. I really like the 122…I know it’s not the preferred generation but I don’t care. It has huge solenoids (like, open-reel machine sized solenoids), huge capstan flywheel, absolutely all discrete signal path…it’s neat. So, yes, when I found a second one I bought it…better cosmetic condition, and it’s the ‘B’ version with balanced I/O. Of course the transport is also non-functional but they’re easy to work on. So the 122-B is the primary machine and the original non-B unit will be the parts donor. Both the pinch rollers actually seem fine, but my plan was to try and hunt down a new one or see if Terry Witt could make one. But I think what’s in them would allow them to run and drive. Okay. I’m getting closer to the point. THEN more recently I satiated an almost 15 year curiosity about the Audio Technica AT-RMX64 multitracker/mixer and bought one…related thread here: https://homerecording.com/bbs/threads/audio-technica-at-rmx64-story….419129/. SO, here I am with a pile of 244 stuff, a 122-B project with parts machine, a fully functional (but finicky track 1) 238, and the AT-RMX64. The AT-RMX64 is, as I figured, and why it’s always been in the back of my mind to own one for so many years, the coolest all-in-one 4-track multitracker/mixer. I figure I’ve gotta have an Athan pinch roller on it, even though here again the original one that’s there seems okay, but I want the best on it and the Athan rollers are amazing. So then I start thinking geez, that Audio Technica roller (actually Sankyo roller as the AT-RMX64 transport was made by Sankyo) looks really similar in size to the 244 roller. I reach out to Athan to ask if they make a roller for the AT-RMX64 and they ask me to just send the original to them so they can make one, but in the meantime I pull out the still sealed in plastic 244 roller I have and disassemble the AT-RMX64 pinch roller assembly…get out the dial calipers and, yep, exact same dims as the 244 roller. So I get ready to install that, but then I think maybe it’s better to still have one for the 244 project. I then notice Athan has a “Nakamichi Sankyo Transport Pinch Roller”, which is the correct roller for the AT-RMX64…the AT-RMX64 Sankyo transport is very similar to a Nakamichi BX-150 transport, also made by Sankyo. So I order the Nak/Sankyo roller. Then one evening while stowing the original disassembled AT-RMX64 pinch roller assembly I notice something…while the rubber is still appropriately soft and “grippy”, it almost looks no longer precisely cylindrical…like, the sides of the cylinder are no longer parallel, but tapered. I got out my dial calipers to test what I was seeing, and sure enough the roller is 0.15mm smaller in diameter from one side to the next. That might not seem like much, but this is a small roller (13.62mm), and think about it…that likely means there is greater pressure when engaging the capstan shaft toward the end with the greater diameter, and also the conical difference in diameter from one side to the other might skew the tape because of the difference in circumference of the roller as you progress from one side of the roller to the other. Yes, the roller as a whole is turning at a constant rate, being driven by the capstan shaft and the roller being in a solid metal or plastic hub…but the rubber itself would be *trying* to rotate at a progressively different rate from one end of the roller to the other, and I have to wonder how that might effect the driving of the tape by the capstan shaft, stretching or skewing the tape, etc. Not to mention the progressive difference in how much the tape is being wrapped on the shaft due to the difference in diameter of the roller and resultant difference in deformation of the roller against the shaft. The tape on this particular roller rides more toward one side of the roller, which coincidentally is the end of roller with the smaller diameter. So my theory is, over the decades, the roller has deformed due to the greater pressure where the tape travels. So this was a revelation to me because I never considered this sort of aging factor with the roller. I always only considered the condition of the rubber, either hardened/glazed or decomposing to an uncured state (turning to goo). Now I’ve got a third reason to consider with an aged pinch roller, particularly on a cassette machine.
Here is a picture of the roller. It’s probably impossible to see in the picture, but the taper caught my eye in person which is why I measured it:

To be continued…

Sometime in the last year or two…hm…maybe three…I sold the Tascam 424mkII 4-track Portastudio I’d had forever in favor of a 244…much more robust build, easier to work on, potential for better sonics, and nicer aesthetics AFAIC. I traded a rare remote I had for the 244 and sold the 424mkII outright. Turned out two of the head coils were roached on the 244 if you can believe that…but it was otherwise in “okay” shape. Well, what to do…then I saw a pair of semi-basket-case 244s on eBay…there’s my parts donors I thought, and maybe enough I could get a spare up and running and make some money back. So I bought them. $150 shipped IIRC. I set it all aside, and then in the meantime, maybe a year, 18 months ago…something like that…I see on eBay…I need to stop looking…a minty condition 244 in original box for $200 shipped…transport not working. I figure it needs all new rubber, but it had the box and was in REALLY nice condition. So I got it. So there I was quite fully invested in 244s. I really like them…clearly. The construction ideology and components remind me a little of my prototype Tascam console from the same era…I did a little collaborating with a couple friends and analyzed the signal path, identified areas of potential improvement and got this idea of building the ultimate 244…bought a crap-ton of components to do this. And then as a part of that I knew all the transport rubber needed replaced and at that time I stumbled on the fact Athan was making device-specific replacement pinch rollers for cassette-based machines…so I thought I had to have one of those for the “ultimate 244”. So I got one. Now, anybody that knows me knows this is all likely to sit in the closet, attic, various places and eventually I’ll start tinkering on it. Well from time to time I might find a local deal on something that needs work and I’ll buy it and fix it, sometimes keep it, sometimes flip it…I typically have no idea what I’m actually going to do or when. So after all the 244 acquisitions I picked up another 688 (my second…repaired and sold the first), and a 488mkII (my first, though I had a 1st generation 488 that I repaired and sold), and I picked up another 238 (the “$50 238” that’s the subject of this thread starting on post 15: https://homerecording.com/bbs/threads/what-is-it-that-compells-me….415149/…it’s the 3rd 238 I’ve owned…returned the first I ever owned, repaired and sold the 2nd). I repaired and sold 688 #2 and the 488mkII after being reminded of my distaste for the finicky edge tracks, but 238 #3 is still here…it has the full-function remote, is, like, 9/10 condition, has the new capstan servo board I installed…just not ready to let it go. Rubber seemed okay, like, everything works, though track 1 is finicky. Okay…take a breath. So I ALSO have a Tascam 122 (1st generation) that I got years ago…related thread here: https://homerecording.com/bbs/threads/tascam-122-story.402165/. I got it so I had something to play all my cassettes from back in the day…huge box of them…lots of gigs recorded on cassette…would like to archive them someday. The 122 was a little beat up and transport non-functional, which I figured I could fix, but with these detriments it was cheap…I think $60 shipped. I really like the 122…I know it’s not the preferred generation but I don’t care. It has huge solenoids (like, open-reel machine sized solenoids), huge capstan flywheel, absolutely all discrete signal path…it’s neat. So, yes, when I found a second one I bought it…better cosmetic condition, and it’s the ‘B’ version with balanced I/O. Of course the transport is also non-functional but they’re easy to work on. So the 122-B is the primary machine and the original non-B unit will be the parts donor. Both the pinch rollers actually seem fine, but my plan was to try and hunt down a new one or see if Terry Witt could make one. But I think what’s in them would allow them to run and drive. Okay. I’m getting closer to the point. THEN more recently I satiated an almost 15 year curiosity about the Audio Technica AT-RMX64 multitracker/mixer and bought one…related thread here: https://homerecording.com/bbs/threads/audio-technica-at-rmx64-story….419129/. SO, here I am with a pile of 244 stuff, a 122-B project with parts machine, a fully functional (but finicky track 1) 238, and the AT-RMX64. The AT-RMX64 is, as I figured, and why it’s always been in the back of my mind to own one for so many years, the coolest all-in-one 4-track multitracker/mixer. I figure I’ve gotta have an Athan pinch roller on it, even though here again the original one that’s there seems okay, but I want the best on it and the Athan rollers are amazing. So then I start thinking geez, that Audio Technica roller (actually Sankyo roller as the AT-RMX64 transport was made by Sankyo) looks really similar in size to the 244 roller. I reach out to Athan to ask if they make a roller for the AT-RMX64 and they ask me to just send the original to them so they can make one, but in the meantime I pull out the still sealed in plastic 244 roller I have and disassemble the AT-RMX64 pinch roller assembly…get out the dial calipers and, yep, exact same dims as the 244 roller. So I get ready to install that, but then I think maybe it’s better to still have one for the 244 project. I then notice Athan has a “Nakamichi Sankyo Transport Pinch Roller”, which is the correct roller for the AT-RMX64…the AT-RMX64 Sankyo transport is very similar to a Nakamichi BX-150 transport, also made by Sankyo. So I order the Nak/Sankyo roller. Then one evening while stowing the original disassembled AT-RMX64 pinch roller assembly I notice something…while the rubber is still appropriately soft and “grippy”, it almost looks no longer precisely cylindrical…like, the sides of the cylinder are no longer parallel, but tapered. I got out my dial calipers to test what I was seeing, and sure enough the roller is 0.15mm smaller in diameter from one side to the next. That might not seem like much, but this is a small roller (13.62mm), and think about it…that likely means there is greater pressure when engaging the capstan shaft toward the end with the greater diameter, and also the conical difference in diameter from one side to the other might skew the tape because of the difference in circumference of the roller as you progress from one side of the roller to the other. Yes, the roller as a whole is turning at a constant rate, being driven by the capstan shaft and the roller being in a solid metal or plastic hub…but the rubber itself would be *trying* to rotate at a progressively different rate from one end of the roller to the other, and I have to wonder how that might effect the driving of the tape by the capstan shaft, stretching or skewing the tape, etc. Not to mention the progressive difference in how much the tape is being wrapped on the shaft due to the difference in diameter of the roller and resultant difference in deformation of the roller against the shaft. The tape on this particular roller rides more toward one side of the roller, which coincidentally is the end of roller with the smaller diameter. So my theory is, over the decades, the roller has deformed due to the greater pressure where the tape travels. So this was a revelation to me because I never considered this sort of aging factor with the roller. I always only considered the condition of the rubber, either hardened/glazed or decomposing to an uncured state (turning to goo). Now I’ve got a third reason to consider with an aged pinch roller, particularly on a cassette machine.
Here is a picture of the roller. It’s probably impossible to see in the picture, but the taper caught my eye in person which is why I measured it:

To be continued…
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