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Cassette deck: TEAC to Nakamichi upgrade?
I have a cheapo TEAC R-400X deck on which I play my old cassettes.
I was wondering if a low end Nakamichi (CR-1A/2A, BX-*, 480 etc) will make a serious difference in playback quality. My tapes are old and half of them are in mono. I am looking for good playback only, not going to make any tapes. Any suggestions? Thanks in advance. |
Cassette deck: TEAC to Nakamichi upgrade?
wrote in message
oups.com... I have a cheapo TEAC R-400X deck on which I play my old cassettes. I was wondering if a low end Nakamichi (CR-1A/2A, BX-*, 480 etc) will make a serious difference in playback quality. My tapes are old and half of them are in mono. I am looking for good playback only, not going to make any tapes. Any suggestions? Thanks in advance. The limiting factor will be the quality of the tapes, rather than the playback machine, unless the tapes were made on something particularly good, like a Nakamichi. Having said that, the great benefit of a Nakamichi is that it can be adjusted to get the best out of whatever tapes you have. In particular, azimuth is realitively easy to adjust, so you can match by ear the azimuth of the original recording. This will extract the maximum amount of treble avaialble off your tapes. Unfortunately, you will have to adjust azimuth every time you play a tape, unless the tapes were all done on the same machine as each machine has it's own azimuth setting. For this reason I suggest you copy the tapes to a PC then burn CDs from them. That way, you'll only have to mess around once. If you can find one of the three-head Nakamichis, they are the easiest of all to adjust. Dolby tracking will be another problem you'll face assuming the tapes have been Dolby encoded. Hopefully they will be Dolby B encoded, as there were two implementations of Dolby C, each slightly different. The early one used two Dolby B circuits in series with different frequency parameters, whilst the later used used a dedicated Dolby BorC IC. The results were slightly different, clearly measureable and often audible. Good luck with the project. S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
Cassette deck: TEAC to Nakamichi upgrade?
In article , Serge Auckland
wrote: wrote in message oups.com... I have a cheapo TEAC R-400X deck on which I play my old cassettes. I was wondering if a low end Nakamichi (CR-1A/2A, BX-*, 480 etc) will make a serious difference in playback quality. My tapes are old and half of them are in mono. I am looking for good playback only, not going to make any tapes. Any suggestions? Thanks in advance. The limiting factor will be the quality of the tapes, rather than the playback machine, unless the tapes were made on something particularly good, like a Nakamichi. I bought a second hand "Cassette Deck Two" a while ago and this did improve the results when I played old tapes. The main reasons being that the Nak had lower noise on replay, and that my old deck had slowly increased its level of wow/flutter and speed variations with tape drag. So if your old deck is a poor one, or deteriorating with age, then it is well worth getting something better. However as you warned [details snipped] the results will also depend on how well the setup of the deck used for recording matches the one used for replay. Fortunately, in my case the azimuth seemed fine and I'd adjusted the old deck's dolby level ages ago so the decks matched reasonably well. (Only ever used Dolby B). Slainte, Jim -- Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html |
Cassette deck: TEAC to Nakamichi upgrade?
On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 08:57:01 +0100, Jim Lesurf
wrote: In article , Serge Auckland wrote: wrote in message oups.com... I have a cheapo TEAC R-400X deck on which I play my old cassettes. I was wondering if a low end Nakamichi (CR-1A/2A, BX-*, 480 etc) will make a serious difference in playback quality. My tapes are old and half of them are in mono. I am looking for good playback only, not going to make any tapes. Any suggestions? Thanks in advance. The limiting factor will be the quality of the tapes, rather than the playback machine, unless the tapes were made on something particularly good, like a Nakamichi. I bought a second hand "Cassette Deck Two" a while ago and this did improve the results when I played old tapes. The main reasons being that the Nak had lower noise on replay, and that my old deck had slowly increased its level of wow/flutter and speed variations with tape drag. So if your old deck is a poor one, or deteriorating with age, then it is well worth getting something better. However as you warned [details snipped] the results will also depend on how well the setup of the deck used for recording matches the one used for replay. Fortunately, in my case the azimuth seemed fine and I'd adjusted the old deck's dolby level ages ago so the decks matched reasonably well. (Only ever used Dolby B). Slainte, Jim Of course if the azimuth of the original machine was wrongly set up, it doesn't really matter. Just adjust the head on the playback machine so it matches, and all is well. In fact it is probably a good idea to give the screw a tweak in each direction just to see if some top does reappear. Of course you don't want to do this if you are going to be doing new recordings - but he isn't. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
Cassette deck: TEAC to Nakamichi upgrade?
On Oct 25, 3:57 am, (Don Pearce) wrote:
On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 08:57:01 +0100, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Serge Auckland wrote: wrote in message groups.com... I have a cheapo TEAC R-400X deck on which I play my old cassettes. I was wondering if a low end Nakamichi (CR-1A/2A, BX-*, 480 etc) will make a serious difference in playback quality. My tapes are old and half of them are in mono. I am looking for good playback only, not going to make any tapes. Any suggestions? Thanks in advance. The limiting factor will be the quality of the tapes, rather than the playback machine, unless the tapes were made on something particularly good, like a Nakamichi. I bought a second hand "Cassette Deck Two" a while ago and this did improve the results when I played old tapes. The main reasons being that the Nak had lower noise on replay, and that my old deck had slowly increased its level of wow/flutter and speed variations with tape drag. So if your old deck is a poor one, or deteriorating with age, then it is well worth getting something better. However as you warned [details snipped] the results will also depend on how well the setup of the deck used for recording matches the one used for replay. Fortunately, in my case the azimuth seemed fine and I'd adjusted the old deck's dolby level ages ago so the decks matched reasonably well. (Only ever used Dolby B). Slainte, Jim Of course if the azimuth of the original machine was wrongly set up, it doesn't really matter. Just adjust the head on the playback machine so it matches, and all is well. In fact it is probably a good idea to give the screw a tweak in each direction just to see if some top does reappear. Of course you don't want to do this if you are going to be doing new recordings - but he isn't. d -- Pearce Consultinghttp://www.pearce.uk.com- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks to everyone for the advice. It looks like I should try to find a deck where it is easy to adjust the azimuth. |
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