T
themaddog
Rockin' & Rollin'
Does anyone know what the Tascam 22-2 is (factory) calibrated for? Is it the same recommendation as the 388, which was Maxell UD-35?
Thanks,
-MD
Thanks,
-MD
Derrick111 said:Whoa, Beck!! I was gonna order a case of Quantegy 456 for my Fostex A-8, but maybe I should reconsider!?!? The 456 will wear more on the machine and I suppose that tape saturation would be out of the question? Fostex A-8 recomends the Ampex 357 or the Scotch 457... what is the bias of these tapes??
Thanks.
My Name said:A little off topic.. well kind of ...
I can see why a using a thicker tape than the recomended can be an issue, but can using thinner tape cause any problems??
See.. Not too of topic![]()
I have a Fostex A-8 and the manual recomends Ampex 357 or Scotch 457... would you recomend I use GM-1800, 407, or somenting else instead of Quantegy 457??Beck said:Nope -- not a typo... 357 is a discontinued series better known as GM-1800 (357) from the 70's and had an flying eagle on the box.. It was similar to the 407 series.
True of the A-8 as well?Beck said:The whole idea was to give the small studio/home recordist a decent mixdown deck at low cost, using less expensive (at the time) Hi-Fi tape. They do an excellent job. Best tape out there right now is Ampex/Quantegy 407 -- the machine was practically built around that tape.
Damn, I missed out on those ramblings... will the 407 give me the same high end and clarity as 456?Beck said:I've rambled extensively in past threads about matching tape with machine -- another lost art. I won't repeat it all here except to say that the 1.5-mil tapes like 456, 226, 911 aren't supple enough to conform to factory head contact specs of these "semi-pro" decks. So while the old standby is normally 456, with machines like the Fostex A-8, R-8, Tascam 22-2, 388 the thinner 407 wins the compatibility test.
So what designation is the old Ampex 357 or Scotch 457??Beck said:457 would be fine too, but its +6 designation is more than the 22-2 can do anyway. It'll sound good, just different than 407 and more expensive.
I don't really know what that's telling me (sorry for lack of experiance). What bias level is this 357 tape, is it +6 like 457??Beck said:This is from the back of a box of Ampex GM-1800 (357), so you won't have to wonder "Does anyone really know?"![]()
Thanks for the manual, JP!!jpmorris said:Hi Derrick, I see the manual served you well![]()
Yes, but I'm trying to learn what I need to know to become the Jedi you see.Beck said:It’s best to leave the nearly unnavigable minefield of old tape, strange tape, dates and packaging to the handful of analog Jedi members.
Strange... my Fostex A-8 manual recomends "Ampex 357 or Scotch 457"... I wonder if that was a typo? Anyhow, good to know! Does 226 or 227 suffer from SSS or other problems?Beck said:457 is/was not made by Scotch; not to my knowledge. 226 and 227 were the 3M/Scotch counterparts to Ampex/Quantegy 456 and 457 respectively.
I'm trying to learn the details that produce such a suggestion.Beck said:To make it easy just remember Quantegy 407 or 457 (and maybe RMGI LPR-35 when they start production.) When in doubt buy these and buy them new, sealed in the box.