Tape recording theory
"David Looser" wrote in message
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"D.M. Procida" wrote in
message
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Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
I remember a cheap tape deck in the '50s that had no capstan - so the
tape
speed varied with the amount on the reels. Disaster if you broke the
tape
and had to junk some.
There were literally dozens like that in the 50s and particularly the
60s. They are known as "rim-drive" decks. They all had horrendous sound
quality; it's not a mechanism suited to the purpose!
They were novelty toys, really. I think they all came from Japan, from
just a very small handful of factories who sold them under a vast array
of more or less plausible western-sounding brand names.
As well as being cheap, they could be made very small.
I remember them well. They used to be extensively advertised in the small
ads in the back of "Practical Wireless" and the like.
Wasn't there a thing in the fifties called "GramDek" or something like that
which you put on the turntable of your Dansette to convert it to a tape
deck?
Geoff
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