No, it's not.
I've never seen that on a Tascam Porta or any recording device really.
In the last 15-or-so years.
Seems totally counter-intuitive
Only to those who cut their teeth on input-to-track architecture, the dumbed down design format found in digital, where supposedly "input-side" mixing is irrelevant due to theoretically unlimited track count. (i.e., fix-it-in-the-mix philosophy). In input-to-track architecture, inputs usually correspond to their numbered recording track, and/or one input may only be assigned to one track at a time. That's the rule in the majority of digital based recording setups, Porta or otherwise.
as it would subvert any panning done during mixing.
No, it doesn't.
So just to get this straight, I could arm tracks 1 and 2 and have live input to both, but if I set both pan knobs 100% LEFT prior to tracking, both tracks will be recorded to track 1 and nothing would be recorded to track 2, despite it being armed with a live signal routed to it??
This is basically correct, with a caveat, that being a failure to recognize the difference between channels and tracks.
Inputs, EQ, Aux Sends and Pan are part of the mixer subsystem, which in the case of the 244 mixes from 4-inputs to 2-(output) channels, aka 2-busses, aka stereo-L/R. The L/R mix from the mixer side feeds the 2-simul recording capablility of the 4-track recorder side of the Portastudio architecture.
In your this scenario, both Input Channels are assigned (thru Pan) to Track 1.
The 244 mixer is a 4x2 (stereo) mixer, albeit a good one in a small fomat. It mixes from 4 inputs (Tape/or Mic-Lineto 2 Busses. That's all it does.
Buss Left from the mixer feeds only Tape Tracks 1 and 3.
Buss Right from the mixer feeds only Tape Tracks 2 and 4.
You may have Channels 1 and 2 plugged with inputs, and you may have Tracks 1 and 2 armed to record, but if you pan Mixer Channels 1 and 2 hard left, they essentially feed ONLY Tape Track 1.
The mixer channel does not equal the tape track in this architecture, but they work together inside the box.
A combination of which tape tracks are armed to record and Pan settings on the mixer will determine which tracks get recorded.
Once the 4 tracks are laid out on tape, the Pan controls in the final mix determine the spread L-R of the 4 tape tracks to the outside world.
I hope this info offers clarity and not confusion to the design and operation of the vintage 244, which is generally regarded as a fine unit.
Much unlike digital, tho'...


