What type of tape?
- The big several inch wide stuff used for studio stuff BITD?
- The reel to reel machines used for elevator music and airline flights, before the advent of mp3 players?
- The traditional cassette / cheap deliverable before CDs were so popular?
What you need:
- Something to play the tape
- Something to convert the output to a digital audio file (soundcard / line input)
- Something to connect the two
Woes:
- that old gear is susceptible to cell phone hand shakes
- you get to record at playback speed. i.e. realtime.
- in the case of musak reels, you could be swapping sides every 90 minutes (if nothing went wrong)
- and various alignment, lubrication, and capstan issues
- if using a headphone output as input, set the volume super low (5%).
- be prepared to run the tape twice, once to set the levels, once to actually capture the content
- as with any conversion you're going to lose quality. How much depends on the quality of your gear.
For me, I've got some reel to reels that I'm currently working with. Old airline stock. And it's three hours of content per reel. (90 minutes each side). I've got RCA outs that I use an RCA to 1/8"(3.5mm) stereo cable on. Which plugs right into my M-Audio Mobile Pre. Just something my Dad wanted me to do for him.