A Reel Person said:
Not having direct hands-on experience with the 22-2 myself, and with my better technical lit being somewhat inacsessible at this time, the quick detail in the Tascam catalog I found says, "independent Monitor and Record functions on each channel", which at least in my own ignorance suggests a sync capability. Why would you monitor one track while recording the other track separately? Alternately, why would these controls have to be independent, and what would make that a distinguishing feature worth mentioning?
Good questions... but remember, the 22-2 and the 32-2 are still
three head decks. How it is setup is that you can "arm" (for record) each track seperately, and the same for "monitoring". However, to monitor, you are monitoring off the INPUT (source) and NOT the record OR playback head. And...as we all know, the symul-sync feature allows monitoring (temporarily)off the record head to keep things all sync'd up. (I think machines like the 38 were the first decks where the playback head was actually redundant, as the record/playback head had basically the same specs for playback)
As to why you have that feature, I might assume for NON critical sync'ing so you could overdub.. An example might be narration over background music. (then mixed to mono, I would guess)
Or...if you are just recording a mono source (like narration), you could technically just record one channel, and be able to rewind and double your available record time by recording on the other channel. (or just flip the tape as you would in a 1/4 stereo format)
Just my opinions and (guessing at facts, maybe..and stuff that we all probably know anyway!!), the 22-2 basically came out so the home user could afford a 1/2 track machine. At the time, the next cheapest machine was for a used pro machine...about 5 grand at the time (maybe?). Also at the time, that was basically the only format radio stations really preferred, record dup plants wanted..etc ....so if you were doing jingles, making 45's or LP's etc... you could "get into" the format without selling your first born.
I remember buying mine new for around $800 at the time. However, I also believe the S/N wasn't anywhere near its bigger brother the 32-2, and especially something like an Ampex, MCI, or whatever. I think it hovered around the low 60's...maybe. You HAD to hit the tape hot, but you could, as I almost always pegged my meters until my EAR said "no".
Oh yeah...forgot the Revox stuff. ...about twice the price, maybe?...wasn't it? Actually nicer machines (than Tascam) I thought. ...the PR77..or something like that (boy, its been a looong time!)
EDIT... nice pic (above)
but...see my explanation above.
Believe me, if you COULD sync, the 22-2 would make a great "jam along" machine for quick and dirty. But, it didn't
