Sorry guys, but the cassette tape was a low-fi product from the start. About the only thing with worse sound was the 8-track.
When I was in school for radio/television/film, open reel was quality standard. I had two open reel decks, a 4-track and a 1/2 track. Both gone now. No more demagnetizing razor blades!I think I went through most of the analog formats, but my favorite time was a reel tape deck. A lot of splicing and dicing!
Now I am 100% digital, and you couldn't pay me enough to go back to anything earlier.
Great that many enjoy the more vintage stuff.
...but my favorite time was a reel tape deck.
My thoughts exactly about tapes. She asked me if I wanted to buy them and I quickly said no but I would see if I could get couple of bucks out of it for the lot for her. I’m going into town tomorrow and there is a store that sells vintage media. They want to look at them.When I was in school for radio/television/film, open reel was quality standard. I had two open reel decks, a 4-track and a 1/2 track. Both gone now. No more demagnetizing razor blades!
FWIW, cassettes were lousy. Even with a high-end deck, the format sucked. Slow moving, narrow tape. Trying to squeeze too much information into too small a space. And most people never maintained their decks, anyways, such as cleaning the heads and demagnetizing all the metal bits that came into contact with the tape.
No more lo-fi than a LP at the high end. Nakamichi decks were as audiophile as top turntables in the 80s.Sorry guys, but the cassette tape was a low-fi product from the start. About the only thing with worse sound was the 8-track.
Sorry, but the facts do not support that claim. The only reason companies produced those pimped out cassette machines is that there were morons that would buy them. It’s like building a Ferrari, but with a Lada engine. No matter how nice the car is, the core is fundamentally flawed.No more lo-fi than a LP at the high end. Nakamichi decks were as audiophile as top turntables in the 80s.
LP records degrade as well.Tape degrades over time, both physically and magnetically. Thin-base tapes like that used on all commercially produced cassettes are subject to "print through" where one wrap of tape prints magnetically onto the adjacent tape. CD's and DVD's degrade, too, but they did improve in quality over time. The early recordable CD's were really problematic and if you have any, get them transferred as as soon as possible!
Sorry, but the facts do not support that claim. The only reason companies produced those pimped out cassette machines is that there were morons that would buy them. It’s like building a Ferrari, but with a Lada engine. No matter how nice the car is, the core is fundamentally flawed.
What is fundamentally flawed is the cassette itself. It’s the weak link. Slow moving, narrow tape. The hardware makes little difference when the limitations are baked into the cassette format.LP records degrade as well.
You know that all recordings were done on tape before digital. Is cassette tape the best medium for high quality sound reproduction, no, but neither are LP records. I'm not talking about mass produced pre-recorded tapes, I'm talking about live recordings or audiophile tapes. If we're going to talk high end, then let's talk high end. Your statement is fundamentally flawed. There are huge differences between common low grade commercial hardware and recordings and high end hardware and recordings.