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36 year old technology [message #75025] Wed, 19 December 2012 19:43 Go to next message
gofar99 is currently offline  gofar99
Messages: 1940
Registered: May 2010
Location: Southern Arizona
Illuminati (5th Degree)
Hi everyone, Possibly this one should go down in the dungeon, but it does relate to a "source". I had an interesting experience with some "old tech" gear today. I was reorganizing a closet and ran across a whole box of cassette tapes. Roughly 75 of them. One caught my attention and I wanted to hear it. OK,how am I going to do that. Out to the shed and bring in my 36 year old recorder. A high end unit from back then. Harman Kardon HK391. Made back when they were a first rate company. Complete with a hand signed copy of its performance charts. For those unfamiliar with it (likely nearly all of you) it was one of a very few that could deliver excellent performance. Not up to a high end reel to reel, but still a huge way above the average. 30HZ to 22K +/- 1 db at "0" level. All the bells and whistles, Dual capstans, Dolby B, C and HX Pro, LN, Chrome and Metal tape capability and had provisions to fine tune each to the tape you were using. Anyhow, I dusted it off, cleaned the heads and stuck in a tape. Behold it worked fine. I played a few 30-40 year old tapes and they were fairly good. When I made a new one with a chrome tape and dolby c. That is when the surprise occurred. It was really quite good. S/N at least as good as an LP and no audible artifacts (distortion, frequency anomalies and such). All in all a refreshing trip down audio memory lane. Smile

Good Listening
Bruce
Re: 36 year old technology [message #75028 is a reply to message #75025] Thu, 20 December 2012 09:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18756
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

I hear you, Bruce. To tell the truth, I really like those decks with the bias adjustment fine-tuning knob. To me, that makes all the difference in the world. A good CrO2 or metal tape can easily hit 20kHz and even a cheap old FeO2 tape can be made to sound really good and crisp. I was in the habit of taking the store-bought casettes and recording over them with the album because I could get better quality that way and still have the artwork that came with the tape.

Like you, I still have a tape deck like that. I even use it to make casettes for my Cutlass. Tape deck in the dash and points in the distributor. Pretty much old school.

Re: 36 year old technology [message #75029 is a reply to message #75028] Fri, 21 December 2012 09:43 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Shane is currently offline  Shane
Messages: 1117
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
Cool Bruce! I got rid of all my tape stuff years and years ago, but wish I still had it now. A friend had a Nakamichi Dragon cassette player that was phenomenal, very top of the line piece of kit. I had an Aiwa AD-F990 deck that was pretty good as well, but not in the league of the Dragon.
Re: 36 year old technology [message #76798 is a reply to message #75025] Sun, 19 May 2013 04:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Azuri is currently offline  Azuri
Messages: 315
Registered: November 2012
Grand Master
That was a nice story Bruce. It's the little things like that which makes being an audiophile so enjoyable. Getting pleasure from the old things like that.
Re: 36 year old technology [message #77221 is a reply to message #75025] Sat, 20 July 2013 08:48 Go to previous message
RustyC is currently offline  RustyC
Messages: 44
Registered: July 2013
Location: AL
Baron
How incredible. You must not have been neglecting the recorder or the cassettes as much as I have mine, though. If I'd gotten out something 36 years old from a shed, it would not be worth dusting off. We still have a decent collection of cassettes and play them, mostly in one of the cars, but they are on their way downhill. We've not been re-recording, just replacing with digital. I'll probably be sorry some day.
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