I thought and heard from off the tapes that they were all recorded full track to (IEC or NAB specifications) so the tapes should not be recorded with any track on them as that would be asking for trouble. The tapes I have and those I have used over the years were full track.
You may know me from another Forum as well.
Nearly all calibration tapes are made full-track. You’ll be hard pressed to find any that aren’t, except it was more common to see tapes made with two distinct tracks for half-track. TEAC and STL made them.
TEAC had a later version of the calibration tape for the ½” 8-track head (which by the way they invented). All I was able to assertain is that it was for initial fine head height setup in the factory. Towards the end when
Tascam/Teac was outsourcing more factory service some of these tapes escaped and eventually got circulated. I found this out the hard way to my chagrin after buying a few from the University of Illinois School of Music. I assumed they would be full-track, until someone tried to use one to setup an MSR-16. Tascam service hardly knew anything about them when I called. The first guy I talked to said he’d never even seen the YTT-1144SP or the YTT-1144-2, but his supervisor knew a bit more.
It didn’t make a lot of sense to me either at first, but I’ve heard no other explanation. One thing to keep in mind is that as stated earlier, Tascam invented the ½” 8-track open reel format, they were the only company designing and manufacturing their own heads, and tolerances were quite tight for the late model heads... 38 version and on. Overall their machines performed better than Fostex and Otari in gap scatter and crosstalk because of good R&D focused on doing just that. So yes, I can see them getting away with making a calibration tape recorded on 8 individual tracks for a specific purpose. You might want to have a full-track version as well, but no one from Tascam has been able to tell me much about it. All I know is that it works perfectly with my TSR-8. YMMV
It’s all academic though, because I’m one of the few people on earth that owns one as far as I know. I never see them for sale anymore, but I do see them referred to in old Tascam manuals and brochures, so I know there must be more out there.
Fostex made a basic calibration tape as well that would work with the 80-8, but to make life simple the best thing to do these days is buy an MRL 31J229 from Jim McKnight and be done with it.
Who are you on another forum? I'm me on every forum... Beck.