As someone who came to audio adulthood in the 1970s I have always been a fan of the cassette. Compact and reusable, they allowed me to record the music that I loved in the order that I wanted. My first deck was a Sony with Dolby B noise-reduction, and its audio quality was good. Somehow, though, it got away from me. I replaced it with a workman-like Akai machine that was OK, but not a shining star. It's belts finally deteriorated, and I could not find replacements.
The solution to this problem was obvious: I needed a direct-drive deck, but which one? After much research and searching, I found it: a used Yamaha K-2000. Mine is all black (like the one shown below) and came equipped with removable rack-mounting brackets. The eBay Seller advertised that it worked; however, upon arrival the hubs would turn for a second or two, and then the transport would disengage. No rewind. No fast-forward. To his credit, the Seller refunded the bulk of the purchase price, and allowed me to keep the deck.
After nearly eight-hours of disassembly, diagnosis, repair, and reassembly, I got the deck working last night, and all that I can say is WOW! For a machine that is more than 40-years old (this model was manufactured from 1982 to 1985) it sounds great. I'm looking forward to revisiting some old favorite tapes, and recording some new ones.
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The solution to this problem was obvious: I needed a direct-drive deck, but which one? After much research and searching, I found it: a used Yamaha K-2000. Mine is all black (like the one shown below) and came equipped with removable rack-mounting brackets. The eBay Seller advertised that it worked; however, upon arrival the hubs would turn for a second or two, and then the transport would disengage. No rewind. No fast-forward. To his credit, the Seller refunded the bulk of the purchase price, and allowed me to keep the deck.
After nearly eight-hours of disassembly, diagnosis, repair, and reassembly, I got the deck working last night, and all that I can say is WOW! For a machine that is more than 40-years old (this model was manufactured from 1982 to 1985) it sounds great. I'm looking forward to revisiting some old favorite tapes, and recording some new ones.
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