There is actually a way to simultaneously output the 8 tracks from a 488mkII...guidance can be found right here on the homerecording.com site:
https://homerecording.com/tas488tips.html
So the OP can use a 488mkII, 238 or 688 to playback the tapes (all three of those units feature the same fixed 3 3/4ips tape speed and dbx Type II noise reduction), and then the computer audio interface of his/her choice featuring at least 8-channels. That's the next step.
Here's what I would do:
I don't have the manual, but I think there should be a way to get 4 individual tracks out at a time by using the monitor and FX sends. For example, it seems you could assign tracks 1 and 2 to bus 1-2 and pan them hard left and right respectively. Then in the MONITOR section, push only the GRP 1-2 button. Then send track 3 out of the FX send 1 jack and track 3 out of the FX send 2 jack. That should give you 4 distinct sends. Actually, I would think you could get 5 by sending track 5 through the tape cue jack, but that won't really help you, because you'll still have to make two bounces.
Anyway, so then you'd transfer tracks 1-4 to tracks 1-4 of the CPU using the above method. Then set it up for tracks 5-8 doing the same thing: tracks 5 and 6 to GRP 1-2 (panned hard left and right, respectively), track 7 to FX send 1, and track 8 to FX send 2. Then transfer those to tracks 5-8 of the CPU.
You'd need a 4-channel interface to do this.
After you get both sets of tracks transferred, you'll just need to align them and use a bit of time stretching to get the beginnings and end to line up. It's surprisingly simpler than it sounds. I've done it several times with a 4-track machine (transferring two tracks at at time and lining them up), and I couldn't notice any artifacts whatsoever.
I hear a lot of people saying that it's nearly impossible to get the tracks to line up, and you don't want to mess with that, etc. But I think that's probably just people parroting what they've heard, and they've probably never tried it themselves. I know from experience that it's a pretty simple task, and it works great.
Do you have an audio interface yet?
There is actually a way to simultaneously output the 8 tracks from a 488mkII...guidance can be found right here on the homerecording.com site:
https://homerecording.com/tas488tips.html
So the OP can use a 488mkII, 238 or 688 to playback the tapes (all three of those units feature the same fixed 3 3/4ips tape speed and dbx Type II noise reduction), and then the computer audio interface of his/her choice featuring at least 8-channels. That's the next step.
Before you buy a bunch of gear, you might try transferring the tracks in several passes and then lining them up manually, compensating for any inconsistencies in playback speed. Not fun, but your DAW has tools that should make it doable, I would think. Worth a try.
Agreed. That is another alternative that is free. One challenge with this though: I don't know how you guys usually do it, but if I'm having to transfer something in such a way as to require lining the tracks up, I normally arm all tracks on tape and record a percussive sound or something so there is a clear consistent marker on the tracks to make the lining up easier and more accurate. The 488mkII only records up to 4 tracks simultaneously. How would you guys do that? Or am I just too damn picky?![]()
Time stretching causes phase issues. Transferring a stereo drum track in two passes is a really good way to get goofy phase and imaging problems.
RFR said:All at once. Thats the only thing that makes sense to my pea brain.
Stretching, aligning, etc. Just sounds like a headache to me. And all this complexity for only 4 tracks.
Farview said:A better way would be to transfer the drums at once. Then, if you can transfer 4 tracks at once, make one of themy a drum track. Then you can use these drum tracks to line up the time stretching of the rest of the tracks, the delete the extras.