F
fazeka
New member
Am looking at a 3440 and upon having the seller (original owner) demo for me, I noticed they go from play to FF/RW (and vice versa) without hitting stop. 
It kinda took me aback when I saw the owner do that, TBH. I would NEVER do this on a Teac/Tascam or most other machines.
I didn't confront or lecture the seller about it. Didn't feel right to do so.
I have to imagine it's BAD to do as it seems like it causes undue wear on motors, brakes, and other items like linkages, etc.
What say you? Should I just bow out of considering the deck suspecting/assuming the owner has been doing this since day 1?
Otherwise the deck looks nice with supposedly 1/2 dozen reels of tape recorded on it over the first decade of it's life. Not sure what that quantity means in reality vis-a-vis running the transport that way as I've done LOTS of shuttling on just one reel when I owned and recorded on one 30 years ago. Speaking of which, I'm interested in it to digitize said tapes I recorded with my band while in college back then.
TIA
It kinda took me aback when I saw the owner do that, TBH. I would NEVER do this on a Teac/Tascam or most other machines.
I didn't confront or lecture the seller about it. Didn't feel right to do so.
I have to imagine it's BAD to do as it seems like it causes undue wear on motors, brakes, and other items like linkages, etc.
What say you? Should I just bow out of considering the deck suspecting/assuming the owner has been doing this since day 1?
Otherwise the deck looks nice with supposedly 1/2 dozen reels of tape recorded on it over the first decade of it's life. Not sure what that quantity means in reality vis-a-vis running the transport that way as I've done LOTS of shuttling on just one reel when I owned and recorded on one 30 years ago. Speaking of which, I'm interested in it to digitize said tapes I recorded with my band while in college back then.
TIA