C
cypal
New member
Teac x300
Since you offered...
Have TEAC X300R . It has been in storage for a couple of years; unused, covered well, unplugged. Upon retrieval, it works mechanically and sends signal to headphones or amp. BUT when I put a tape on to play, I get nothing. The tape appears to be aligned with the head and in contact. No VU meter action. No sound.
What would cause this, and what can I do about it?
Beck said:Reel-to-reel is generally going to give you the best results. However, those that are familiar with terms like "reference metal cassette" will remember how far that format came before being replaced (prematurely) by CD.
Even cassette has its place in that it too is free from digital coldness. Tape compression is one attribute, but not the only one. A little cross-talk and the presence of "just right" 3rd harmonic distortion, which is musically pleasing to the ear, is another. Boston's Tom Scholz refers to these qualities as, "The analog smear effect." I guess that term is as good as any. I describe it as the difference between a cold Winter rain and a warm Summer shower.
Cassette technology has made up for a lot through design, such as CrO2 tape (Type II) formulations, finer magnetic particles and noise reduction. Its biggest challenge compared to open reel is wow & flutter, which is audible at slow cassette speeds on most decks.
An open reel deck is your best bet. With today's modern tape formulations there's nothing a 1/4" 2-track @ 15 ips can't do. Even a consumer 2-channel 4-track @ 7 1/2" ips will knock your socks off if you've become acclimated to CD.
Tape speed and track width is a big part of the picture, but things like head design, tape formulation, and microcomputer transport control have made the issue a little more complex.
Recommendations:
2-track mastering decks - Tascam 22-2, Tascam 32-2, Otari MX5050
4-track 2-channel consumer hi-fi - Akai GX-77, TEAC X3/X300, Realistic TR3000 (made by TEAC)
I'll be happy to answer any other questions best I can.
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Since you offered...
Have TEAC X300R . It has been in storage for a couple of years; unused, covered well, unplugged. Upon retrieval, it works mechanically and sends signal to headphones or amp. BUT when I put a tape on to play, I get nothing. The tape appears to be aligned with the head and in contact. No VU meter action. No sound.
What would cause this, and what can I do about it?