
cjacek
Analogue Enthusiast
As you probably know, having visited http://www.quantegy.com/ recently, "plans are being formulated for the revival of Quantegy 499 Gold Studio Mastering and GP9 Platinum Studio Mastering audio products".
This is nice and all but seems catered mostly to higher end studio machines capable of running these ultra hot tapes. Most of our home studio machines, on the other hand, the TEAC, TASCAM, OTARI and FOSTEX recorders, are simply not able to even bias up to the fore mentioned tapes, including being physically harder to pull, needlessly stressing the tape path and motors.
Additionally, being more stiff, the 499 / GP9 place undue wear on the heads and provide a less than ideal frequency response, as the result of a less than ideal tape wrap over the heads. Our machines were originally built around 456 specs and its variants, the 406, 457, 407.
I already sent Quantegy a note about this but I thought it'd be more powerful if everyone who reads this post, emails them, with an option to call
. In fact, here's a couple of contacts:
Mr. Peter Hutt at (770) 335-6910
E-mail: peter@quantegy.com
or
Mr. Jahret Sylvester at (678) 967-4713
E-mail: jahret@quantegy.com
We can get the tapes back if we do this together and, additionally, as a result of the competition, tape prices will surely come down.
Quantegy needs to be aware of the relatively large share of the market, the typical home recordist, that it is not targeting and it needs to, if it hopes to stay afloat.
Here's hoping for a nice flood of emails and calls...

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This is nice and all but seems catered mostly to higher end studio machines capable of running these ultra hot tapes. Most of our home studio machines, on the other hand, the TEAC, TASCAM, OTARI and FOSTEX recorders, are simply not able to even bias up to the fore mentioned tapes, including being physically harder to pull, needlessly stressing the tape path and motors.
Additionally, being more stiff, the 499 / GP9 place undue wear on the heads and provide a less than ideal frequency response, as the result of a less than ideal tape wrap over the heads. Our machines were originally built around 456 specs and its variants, the 406, 457, 407.
I already sent Quantegy a note about this but I thought it'd be more powerful if everyone who reads this post, emails them, with an option to call

Mr. Peter Hutt at (770) 335-6910
E-mail: peter@quantegy.com
or
Mr. Jahret Sylvester at (678) 967-4713
E-mail: jahret@quantegy.com
We can get the tapes back if we do this together and, additionally, as a result of the competition, tape prices will surely come down.
Quantegy needs to be aware of the relatively large share of the market, the typical home recordist, that it is not targeting and it needs to, if it hopes to stay afloat.
Here's hoping for a nice flood of emails and calls...


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