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Re: Gold wave is an ok editor. [message #173 is a reply to message #169] Wed, 28 January 2004 23:15 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lon is currently offline  lon
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I am most familiar with Goldwave and the new version
has solved some of the user interface problems.

Digital editing or pro audio was a connection I didn't
make straight off. Wayne is likely right about the
'curve time' and keyword usage to establish a thread
within one of the current forums.
Re: Magnetic Tape [message #174 is a reply to message #171] Thu, 29 January 2004 01:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
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I think we're having a pretty good discussion about tape here too. Maybe it could just be one of those subjects for general? Then again, maybe you're right, that the vinyl forum could be changed to cover the broader topic of analog media, tape and vinyl disk. This is sort of like having mpeg players in the same digital audio category as CD's and DVD's.

On another topic, how many of those "mydoom" virus E-Mails are you getting each day? Did you see the free McAfee scanner in the tower forum?
Pioneer RT-909 Reel-to-Reel [message #175 is a reply to message #172] Thu, 29 January 2004 02:13 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
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There are others, but the Pioneer RT-909 is one reel-to-reel tape deck that I know is particularly popular.

On the subject of repairs, that's one thing that makes pro units so attractive. They are more likely to be serviceable for a long time, with parts available from the manufacturer. There are some commercial units that have a long support period, but I think the majority of them are forgotten in an incredibly short time. That's one thing I hate - If you can't get parts for some this stuff, it's rendered unserviceable. You can usually second-source electronics components, but little plastic parts of mechanical assemblies aren't so easy.
Re: Magnetic Tape [message #176 is a reply to message #172] Thu, 29 January 2004 06:42 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Manualblock is currently offline  Manualblock
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yes very familiar with that unit, the rather slimline type, excellent sound! What is the basic difference in the commercial verse home units? Better transports? How do you adress tape decay over time and the loss of high freq. each time the tape is played? I have found the sound to be indistinguishable from the record except for slight tape hiss, much better than CD. Does the 909 carry 10 " reels?


Re: Magnetic Tape [message #177 is a reply to message #176] Thu, 29 January 2004 09:02 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
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RT-909's will handle the large reels, yes. But I wouldn't call 'em slim by any means. They are built to mount in 19" EIA racks, and are about a foot deep.

/forum/index.php?t=getfile&id=2776&private=0
Pioneer RT-909 Reel-to-Reel Tape Deck
Re: Pioneer RT-909 Reel-to-Reel [message #178 is a reply to message #175] Thu, 29 January 2004 18:43 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Manualblock is currently offline  Manualblock
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That is a beauty? What about maintainence, alignment, capstan wear other adjustments do you do your own work? I dream of using my Akai or upgrading; like that scene in Pulp Fiction where Vincent enters Marcellus's house and there sits this huge Teac in the living room and it clicks on as he enters, playing Dusty Springfield singing Son of a Preacher Man.

Re: Pioneer RT-909 Reel-to-Reel [message #179 is a reply to message #175] Thu, 29 January 2004 18:46 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Manualblock is currently offline  Manualblock
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The question mark after the first sentence is supposed to be an exclamation point!

Re: Magnetic Tape [message #180 is a reply to message #171] Thu, 29 January 2004 19:52 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Mike.e is currently offline  Mike.e
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Personally i use Cassette tape sometimes for lofi recordings-as my stereo has no outs! and it has no inputs either,so i cant go hifi > pc > hifi amps > hifi speakers......

i have recorded radio>cassette tape > pc *mp3*
just think of the distortion artifacts :-S
and im talking a 5$ cassete tape player on my plastic sanyo system :-P
unfortunately my pc mucked(my new one) and i cudnt save the mp3s ,those were my fav-whats worse is i hardly know the artist either-those songs just had something in them to cause extreme happyness!

Re: Pioneer RT-909 Reel-to-Reel [message #181 is a reply to message #178] Fri, 30 January 2004 06:05 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
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I always thought the RT-909 was an attractive deck too. I maintain my deck, and have owned it for about 25 years. Service and owners manuals for this deck can be purchased from www.StereoManuals.com.

So far, all I've had to do was replace the pinch rollers, but it's time for a tension adjustment. When motor torque gets off, the tape speed slows and it acts like a mechanical drag. But adjust the driver circuits and you're back in business. It is a rare occurrence, but these things have been on the road long enough that it is a known failure mode, and I'd consider it to be a common symptom. I've never had to do this tension adjustment on this deck and it's had heavy use, so "common symptom" shouldn't be taken to mean that it necessarily happens frequently. But I've seen it on other RT-909 decks and performed the alignment for people, and it is probably one of the more common trouble symptoms described of them.

Here's a fun little story. I bought this tape deck new in the late seventies, and back then, I had a little computer based on a 6502 microprocessor, 4Kb RAM and 8Kb BASIC on ROM. It was a Synertek Systems Sym-1, also called a Vim-1. Lots of digital I/O - Great for building robots and controlling stuff in your room. So I connected a half dozen lines on this computer to the control buttons (play, fast-forward, etc.) and also monitored the index pulses. On the back of my RT-909 is a DB-25 connector to allow connection between the computer and the tape deck, and I used the tape deck both to store data and music.

I would put digital index files at the front of tapes that held a catalog of their contents, and you could select what music to play and it would automatically seek the songs in whatever order you wanted. So I had an early form of shuttle search and indexing. I also stored all my little programs; PiAlign and other programs were stored on one of my reel-to-reel tapes back then. Back in my college days, people would walk by my room and see the reel-to-reel "magically" change directions and seek out a new song to play through my seven π's. Those were fun times, and I still have the tape deck and the computer to remember them by.

Seems like just yesterday to me, but also a long time ago, know what I mean?

Re: Pioneer RT-909 Reel-to-Reel [message #182 is a reply to message #181] Fri, 30 January 2004 11:19 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Manualblock is currently offline  Manualblock
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Absolutely, its these memories that provide the continuity and connection that make this a community. That is a great memory; ties in with college days and all those remmembrances. Music shure sounded good back then. Let me share one more , Back in the day we spent every summer day at the beach. Approaching the beach from the walkway you climbed a set of stairs and at the top you overlooked the entire beach, somtimes full with upwards of 10-20 thousand people on a warm day. I remmember once cresting the dune and at the top hearing the cummulative sound from god knows how many AM transistor radios all playing the same song from the popular station WMCA, "Good Guys"; the song was Stevie Wonder "My Cherie' Amour" The sound filled the air like a wave,That remains one of the telling memories of summer. Love these stories.

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