Additional reply part 1 of 2…
You need to stop trying to figure out how the main mixer (input channels 1-4, the channels with the TRIM, EQ, and AUX controls and of course input faders) and TAPE CUE mixer are interrelated…they’re not. They are independent mixers.
I’ll say this in the video I’ll make, but, big picture, a multi-channel audio mixing console is a thing that receives multiple signals typically of multiple types (mic level, line level, etc.), converts them all to a common signal type (level-matches them for instance), typically allows the operator to shape and process those signals, and then assign or direct those signals to multiple outputs either individually, or by combining or “summing” 2 or more signals together. Typically we call the pathways of the console that receive signals as channels…input channels. There anre other types of channels, but for the sake of simplicity, focusing on the 244 input mixer, I’ll just refer to input channels. And then we typically call pathways that sum signals together busses…think of a bus that can carry multiple people to a common place.
The Tascam 244 is really 3 main components combined into one device. There is the 4-track multitrack cassette recorder/reproducer, and then, like many period devices made by Tascam, there are actually two mixers: an input mixing console on the left, and a return or monitor mixer to the right above the tape transport; the TAPE CUE mixer. Yes, together they form one mixing console, but it’s helpful to consider them separately because they can and do function independent of each other for specific purposes.
Let’s look closer at the input mixer in the left, which is a “4x2” mixing console, meaning 4 input channels and a 2-channel summing buss; 4 into 2. The 2-channel summing buss, which is labeled as the “L-R” buss, can be used as a single stereo summing buss, or like two separate mono summing busses. You assign or route the 4 inputs to the 244’s main L-R summing buss using the PAN controls on the 4 input channel strips. An input panned center will be assigned equally to both of the 2-channel summing buss’ channels. And of course partially panning an input more L or more R will place the input signal more prominently in that respective summing buss channel. In this way you can create a stereo mix. If you pan an input all the way hard L or hard R, the signal will exclusively be placed in only that one single respective summing buss channel. So this is how you would use the L-R summing buss as a pair of mono summing busses. Are you with me so far? In my mind when I’m using a “stereo” or two channel summing buss as two mono summing busses, I don’t think of the summing buss channels as “L” or “R”, I think of them as “1” & “2”. The 4x2 input mixer also, BTW, has an auxiliary summing buss, the 2-channel AUX buss that’s setup for stereo operation, but also, like the master summing buss, can be used as a pair of mono summing busses. So those are the summing outputs for the 4 inputs of the input mixer. There are also direct outputs for each input channel, but they have a dedicated purpose and I’ll talk about that later.
Next we have the TAPE CUE mixer, the set of 4 concentric knobs there above the transport. Again, this is another, albeit very basic, 4x2 mixing console, which also has a mono feed to the CUE monitor path. As I’ve mentioned earlier the output of the TAPE CUE section goes to two places…a mono sum to the CUE setting of the monitor select switch and then that goes to the BUSS MONITOR knob and then the headphone jacks…and the stereo sum to the TAPE CUE L-R output jacks. Again, the TAPE CUE PAN controls have no effect on the mono sum to the CUE monitor path to the headphones…they only have an effect on the stereo sum to the TAPE CUE L-R output jacks at the back of the unit. So that’s the output of it. The valuable distinction to absorb into your brain here is the inputs of the two different mixing sections, the input mixer and TAPE CUE mixer…the input mixer sources stuff from the outside world at the input jacks, OR the tape tracks depending on the setting of the input source switches for each channel (usually set to INPUT during tracking/overdubbing, and TAPE during mixdown), but the TAPE CUE mixer only sources the tape tracks, and, as noted in an earlier post, exists for the purpose of monitoring tape tracks while overdubbing. Again, as mentioned earlier, there are a couple other special purpose things you can do with the TAPE CUE mixing section, but at this point just wrap your head around its primary purpose as a cue monitor mixer for tape tracks. Again, if you’re using the headphone jacks to monitor the TAPE CUE mixer, the PAN controls don’t matter because you are monitoring in mono using the CUE setting on the monitor select switch…which is a mono sum of the L-R buss and the TAPE CUE mixer output.
To be continued…