
sweetnubs
New member
I'm missing something. If he can bypass the 1/4" inputs on the four tracker then it must have xlr inputs. If it has xlr inputs why would he need the xlr inputs on a different mixer?
I'm missing something. If he can bypass the 1/4" inputs on the four tracker then it must have xlr inputs. If it has xlr inputs why would he need the xlr inputs on a different mixer?
Oh yeah I guess the phantom power issue and high impedance/low gain of the inputs makes sense. Been a long time since I've touched a cassette four tracker! Salut 1982!
If you want to have XLR inputs then yes, run the mixer outs into your portastudio line ins.
But apart from that I doubt you would get better sound quality by bypassing the input section of the portastudio. The main weakness is the tape section. Unlike a pre, it is maintenance hungry. Everything, including having the right tape, has to be set up just right, and aligned carefully. It takes time and money.
That's a serious downside of analog tape.
Tim
Huh? I must be missing something. Aligned carefully, set up right? It's a cassette for god's sakes. You pop it in and go.![]()
The only real advantage in using an external mixer (for me) with a 4 track has been when recording drums. The case I am referring to was a drummer who insisted that each drum and cymbal had to be micked individually, recorded all at once, on 2 tracks (premixed stereo), I used 14 mics total and 2 eight channel mono mixers on 2 tracks to accomplish this. It was a hassle to set up and do, but it worked.
Sure, you pop it in and go. And if it's not set up right it will sound mediocre. No contradiction.
The achilles heel of cassette recording was noise. The solution was dbx or dolby NR. It worked, but only if the machine was in good condition and set up right. Analog NR was fussy, especially with cassette.
Portastudios werent designed for easy servicing and alignment. They were made down to a price for the home user. Adjustments normally accessible from the outside on pro gear required the machine to be dismantled. It took time and effort to get the bias, level, etc right, much more than comparable pro 3 head machines. (Just cos all those adjustments werent visible from the outside of the machine doesnt mean they werent there. They were buried in the middle of the internal circuit boards and hard to get at).
It was probably easier and faster aligning a pro reel to reel deck than a Portastudio.
As a result, many home users found getting the alignment right too hard or too expensive, especially with dbx and Dolby, so they switched it off. And they got hissy recordings.
With care, a portastudio could sound very good. The fact that you could "pop it in and go" was irrelevent to this. The industry used various types of audio and video cassettes for decades. Still do but now it's digital tape. And they too needed careful machine alignment to get good results.
I'm a tech. That's a tech's perspective.
Tim
I don't doubt any of what you say, but I was under the impression that the recorders come from the factory set-up and ready to go? Meaning the bias set for type II cassettes. I've taken a few machines apart myself and have repaired tape transports, changed belts. etc. Though I have never aligned heads. When I got a closer look, it looked to me as if the factory "Glues" the head alignment screws down so the heads won't easily get out of wack. Sometimes the glue is a clear red, blue or green color.
I do realize over time that machines do require servicing, but I'm not going to be paranoid or anal over it. As long as the machine has relatively low use and the owner cleans and demags the heads on a regular basis, he or she should be ok. Although everyone out there using 4 tracks try to acheive the best possible recording with the knowledge they have, Nobody I know tries to produce a pro level record using a 4 or 8 track cassette. Nobody I know uses the same machine for 20yrs/12 hours a day. They are simply a quick tool for capturing ideas. These machines are supposed to be fun, and they are! Simply designed for their intended purpose........Hense the word......."DEMOS"