M
MBP2112
New member
Howyadoin,
I've had an idea kicking around where I'd get folks with old multitrack analog cassette "garage tapes" to pay me to transcribe their tracks to .wav files and pass them along on a data CD for posterity. After thinking about this, I had some questions...
1. Are there proprietary formats for multitrack cassette recordings, so that I couldn't use, say, a Fostex to read tapes from a Tascam?
2. How much head alignment variance is typical between "perfect" and your run-of-the-mill 80's vintage multitrack cassette deck? Is it enough to make transcribing a nightmare? If I'm working off tapes for which the original recording deck is no longer available, will I have to do a bunch of head alignment tweaking to replicate the conditions of the deck on which the tracks were recorded? Are there decks that have an easier time adjusting head alignment than others?
Thanks!
Mark P.
Salem, MA
I've had an idea kicking around where I'd get folks with old multitrack analog cassette "garage tapes" to pay me to transcribe their tracks to .wav files and pass them along on a data CD for posterity. After thinking about this, I had some questions...
1. Are there proprietary formats for multitrack cassette recordings, so that I couldn't use, say, a Fostex to read tapes from a Tascam?
2. How much head alignment variance is typical between "perfect" and your run-of-the-mill 80's vintage multitrack cassette deck? Is it enough to make transcribing a nightmare? If I'm working off tapes for which the original recording deck is no longer available, will I have to do a bunch of head alignment tweaking to replicate the conditions of the deck on which the tracks were recorded? Are there decks that have an easier time adjusting head alignment than others?
Thanks!
Mark P.
Salem, MA