Just picked up this Tascam Corporation Model 10 – anyone here familiar with it?

temploprods

temploprods

New member
I found this mixer through a guy who clears out old houses. They had to empty the place that same day because the keys were being handed over to the new owner. Among all the gear lying around were 3 Ampex 440s and several other interesting pieces I took. According to what I was told, this mixer had been stored in a warehouse since around the year 2000. Sadly, it’s barely putting out any signal at the moment. I just started a deep cleaning yesterday to bring it back to life.

There’s not much detailed info online about this exact model.
Does anyone here have one?
What year is it from exactly?
How would you compare its preamps to other Tascam mixers from that era?
Any schematics or documentation available?
How does the sound quality hold up compared to the M-30 or M-50?
Were the faders or switches a weak point on these units?

Any info would be appreciated! I’d love to restore this console properly.
 

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Haha, guilty as charged! Nothing beats the feeling of real knobs and tape moving ...
Digital’s cool, but this stuff breathes.
Loving the mission of tearing it down and seeing if I can bring it back to life. The history behind it… that’s the real magic
 
The last time I touched a Model 10 was probably around '71 when I graduated from high school. A local store was a Teac/Tascam dealer and a buddy worked there. They had a room set up with a mixing board, and a tape machine (don't remember which one). There was a tape that someone had recorded and we fooled around for a while doing different mixes. It was really my first time ever trying to mix something on my own and showed me how we hear things differently.
 
Could it have been a little later than that? The Model 10 was not introduced to the world until the 1973 AES show in New York.
 
It was TASCAM's 1st console.
The last time I touched a Model 10 was probably around '71 when I graduated from high school. A local store was a Teac/Tascam dealer and a buddy worked there. They had a room set up with a mixing board, and a tape machine (don't remember which one). There was a tape that someone had recorded and we fooled around for a while doing different mixes. It was really my first time ever trying to mix something on my own and showed me how we hear things differently.
The companion machines from TASCAM were from their 70 series. As far as I can recall, there were 2, 4, & 8 track versions.
 
I found this mixer through a guy who clears out old houses. They had to empty the place that same day because the keys were being handed over to the new owner. Among all the gear lying around were 3 Ampex 440s and several other interesting pieces I took. According to what I was told, this mixer had been stored in a warehouse since around the year 2000. Sadly, it’s barely putting out any signal at the moment. I just started a deep cleaning yesterday to bring it back to life.

There’s not much detailed info online about this exact model.
Does anyone here have one?
What year is it from exactly?
How would you compare its preamps to other Tascam mixers from that era?
Any schematics or documentation available?
How does the sound quality hold up compared to the M-30 or M-50?
Were the faders or switches a weak point on these units?

Any info would be appreciated! I’d love to restore this console properly.
It was TASCAM's 1st console. Performance was ok but nothing to get excited about. Its main selling point was how cheap it was compared to other consoles of the day.
 
Could it have been a little later than that? The Model 10 was not introduced to the world until the 1973 AES show in New York.
Might have been... It was a LONG time ago. My buddy worked there when we started college. I remember he bought a pair of JBL L100s with the money he made at the store. He got the "employee discount" on the speakers and a Crown Preamp. I think he still has both.

As for the console, I remember thinking it was way more than I spent on college tuition each year. There was no way I would have had the money to buy something like that! When you're clearing about $50 a week working, plus some band job money, it was just enough to pay for school, dates, motorcycle and guitar payments and gas money!
 
I only have the brochure…no manual. What can tell from pics online is it is all discrete solid state opamp based (so no chips, but discrete opamps). I wish I had schematics. The mic amp is unbalanced…no transformer or anything. It is vintage budget. The linear faders were a relatively rare design that used cord and rotary pots. Not the most desirable IMO but work. There look to be some large filter caps on each module. Noise level could likely be improved with a recap. I know somebody that used one many decades ago. What I recall him saying is it was what they could afford. They didn’t get it for the sonics which were not remarkable. Noise and transients were improved with a custom power supply. The modules are nicely serviceable, being individual with plugin edge connectors, but they are located at the front of each module, so I’m not exactly sure how that works as far as getting them in and out. I don’t know what the headroom potential is like because I don’t know what the audio power rail voltage is, but I imagine it’s also not remarkable. The feature set is usable. As far as the build quality what I can tell you is I had, at one time, the amp card cage and amp and meter assemblies for a Model 70-8 1/2” 8-track…the first 1/2” 8-track ever…the companion multitrack machine to the Model 10. Innovative. But the build quality was really not good. Not just underwhelming, but cheaply done. The next generation of Tascam stuff was much better. I’m not slamming Teac, I’m just sharing what I know and my opinions. If the Model 10 console is the same grade, be prepared to wear kid gloves when working on it…really thin phenolic resin PCBs, thin gauge metal structures…just…budget. Even the Model 5 I consider next generation and it is a completely different story. I wouldn’t consider the Model 10 desirable, but I’d also say it is interesting and an important point in history because of the price point they hit and the features they included. This is Tascam’s thumbprint going forward and they executed it better and better each time…better builds, more innovation and features, and keeping things affordable…there are features on Tascam products you’ll not find in anything else, and they kept the prices affordable.
 
To the OP, please, please don’t take my feedback/opinions/words as discouragement or shaming or anything. You have the console and it’s worth getting it working.

I’ve never found online versions of the manual and tech docs. I strongly encourage you to grab this:

https://ebay.us/m/LSXpzP

It’s a rare antiquity at this point.

And if you do get it and can throw up some hi res pics of the schematics I can offer some feedback on the circuits (no pun intended), but like I said there’s not a chip in sight, and sometimes that can bring some desirable character. But it’s a solid state device with no transformers or anything, so likely not a “character” signal path per se. But if I ended up with one for nothing I’d definitely get it running and see how it sounds.

Please share any additional pics you are inclined to share because there’s not a lot around.

I think the Model 10 was sold mainly like 1974-1975.
 
I only have the brochure…no manual. What can tell from pics online is it is all discrete solid state opamp based (so no chips, but discrete opamps). I wish I had schematics. The mic amp is unbalanced…no transformer or anything. It is vintage budget. The linear faders were a relatively rare design that used cord and rotary pots. Not the most desirable IMO but work. There look to be some large filter caps on each module. Noise level could likely be improved with a recap. I know somebody that used one many decades ago. What I recall him saying is it was what they could afford. They didn’t get it for the sonics which were not remarkable. Noise and transients were improved with a custom power supply. The modules are nicely serviceable, being individual with plugin edge connectors, but they are located at the front of each module, so I’m not exactly sure how that works as far as getting them in and out. I don’t know what the headroom potential is like because I don’t know what the audio power rail voltage is, but I imagine it’s also not remarkable. The feature set is usable. As far as the build quality what I can tell you is I had, at one time, the amp card cage and amp and meter assemblies for a Model 70-8 1/2” 8-track…the first 1/2” 8-track ever…the companion multitrack machine to the Model 10. Innovative. But the build quality was really not good. Not just underwhelming, but cheaply done. The next generation of Tascam stuff was much better. I’m not slamming Teac, I’m just sharing what I know and my opinions. If the Model 10 console is the same grade, be prepared to wear kid gloves when working on it…really thin phenolic resin PCBs, thin gauge metal structures…just…budget. Even the Model 5 I consider next generation and it is a completely different story. I wouldn’t consider the Model 10 desirable, but I’d also say it is interesting and an important point in history because of the price point they hit and the features they included. This is Tascam’s thumbprint going forward and they executed it better and better each time…better builds, more innovation and features, and keeping things affordable…there are features on Tascam products you’ll not find in anything else, and they kept the prices affordable.
What he said.
 
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