L
lo beam
New member
Anyone have any experience of using these machines?
Any help or info would be cool
Many thanks.
Any help or info would be cool

Many thanks.
Yeah, pretty muchThe Ghost of FM said:
Did you have a specific question about your machine or, were you just looking for some positive re-enforcement of your purchase decision?
Cheers!![]()
When you press the record button, be prepared to record your soul's expression and play as if your last will and testament were being recorded on tape.Any tips, info at all would be great!
I basically wanted to get across the point that if you weren't putting your heart and soul down on tape or hard drive, you weren't getting full value out of your equipment.Oh, what a can of worms you have opened with your insensitive comparison!
Always do!The Ghost of FM said:When you press the record button, be prepared to record your soul's expression and play as if your last will and testament were being recorded on tape.
There is an unexplainable experience to that very factor, ya know!seeing those wheels rolling & hearing the clunk of the buttons
I think the 3340 was an earlier model, originally issued under the Teac label. These 30 series models date from the early/mid 80s.philboyd studge said:I remember using those 4 tracks, weren't they called 3340's? Anyway, they were reliable and had great fidelity. Didn't like the VU meters.
lo beam said:Anyone have any experience of using these machines?
Any help or info would be cool
Many thanks.
The Ghost of FM said:I have owned and used Teac and TASCAM 4 track reel to reels in the past and have found them to offer an incredible degree of fidelity, way beyond what a Porta-studio cassette based recorder can offer and give you that golden analog warmth quality to your sound that many digital recording enthusiasts long for and try to emulate with exotic pre-amps and simulators.
Tape running at 15 ips on a standard track width can give you this professional level of sound quality without all the "hamburger helper" jazz.
Did you have a specific question about your machine or, were you just looking for some positive re-enforcement of your purchase decision?
Cheers!![]()
lo beam said:Yeah, pretty much
I've always loved the way open reel decks sound - I did a lot of my early recordings on them, but was at the stage where gear really wasn't a big deal - just a means to an end.
I've been working in the digital realm for the last few years and, while I love it for different reasons, I really want to get my teeth into analogue. From the engineers' side as much as the artists' this time.
I've checked out a lot of decks & really the main things I'm looking for are : at least 15 ips speed, 10.5" reels, sturdy build quality, good rep, etc.
Got my eyes on a Revox B77, or mebbe a Studer B67 for mastering - but I love these Tascam 34 4 tracks.
Any tips, info at all would be great!
Thanks.