View Full Version : Old Technology: Cassette Deck
Lawrence Grand
09-08-2008, 05:08 PM
Just picked up a used Nakamichi CV-1 cassette deck for cheap. Figured, what the heck, I still have a lot of old music on cassettes, this is an inexpensive way to hear the old stuff. I've been trying to find reviews of the circa '88-'91 machine, but no luck. Anyone know anything about this deck? Is it a good, reliable unit? Thanks.
LG
my dad still uses cassette deck. it's ancient but it still has its value
heiney9
09-08-2008, 07:40 PM
Just picked up a used Nakamichi CV-1 cassette deck for cheap. Figured, what the heck, I still have a lot of old music on cassettes, this is an inexpensive way to hear the old stuff. I've been trying to find reviews of the circa '88-'91 machine, but no luck. Anyone know anything about this deck? Is it a good, reliable unit? Thanks.
LG
Do you mean CR-1? No such thing as a CV-1. I have a CR-1 currently that hasn't been used in about 4 years. Nice, simple, basic 2 head cassette deck. Nothing special and the last generation of decent Nak decks.
Look here
http://www.naks.com/
In the left hand column click on "naks" to get an overview of all the models and them click on your model to get specs.
The CR-1 was the least inexpensive of the day, but still a solid deck and IMO, a better deck than anything else available at the time.
I've owned a lot of Nak decks over the years when home taping was popular, including the Nak Dragon. They were the best at what they did.
Enjoy
H9
Lawrence Grand
09-08-2008, 10:37 PM
Thanks, HP. I appreciate your comments. Anything you'd recommend in terms of pm? Although the unit was described as being in excellent condition by an online seller with a 100% satisfactory rating, I haven't received it yet. Many thanks.
LG
George Grand
09-09-2008, 03:15 PM
There's a cassette deck in both my rigs. A Tandberg TCD-310, and a Sony ES with remote. Indispensable items in my opinion. They make great cassettes for the car too, because I'm not sticking any cd's in that thing.
Some cassettes I've owned since the late 60's. Sentimental value, not available on disc or vinyl, etc.
mmadden28
09-09-2008, 04:06 PM
Don't cassettes, or any mag media for that matter , lose thier 'strength' so to speak as time goes on?
tugboat
09-09-2008, 04:21 PM
I still have cassettes I recorded back in '83 and they have degraded only slightly from time and use. If you start with a quality cassette and recorder, they have a pretty good lifespan.
I have a Pioneer 603R with auto bias and EQ that I use to record my type IV cassettes and a Pioneer CT-F9191 that I use for recording of type II and playback of type II and IV (as well as prerecorded types). For higher quality tape I use my Akai R2R, but those darn reels are as portable as cassettes. :)
nikolas812
09-09-2008, 04:58 PM
This thread is pretty ironic.
We were rinding around in my dads car the other day and he threw in a 25+ year old cassette and it was glorious. We couldn't believe how good it still sounded.
He said he recorded it about 25 years ago from a half speed master recording on a Yamaha TT to a Nakamichi Tape deck.
The sound was amazing!!
Nick
Lawrence Grand
09-09-2008, 05:57 PM
So how do you guys maintain your cassette decks? Is there any maintenace you have to perform, like cleaning the heads, changing belt drives, etc?
tugboat
09-09-2008, 06:00 PM
This thread is pretty ironic.
We were rinding around in my dads car the other day and he threw in a 25+ year old cassette and it was glorious. We couldn't believe how good it still sounded.
He said he recorded it about 25 years ago from a half speed master recording on a Yamaha TT to a Nakamichi Tape deck.
The sound was amazing!!
Nick
I currenty use the 3M Blackwatch 4040 type IV cassette and can get quality recordings from CDs while taking the harsh edge off the ditital recording. Now if I record from LP, it can be hard to tell the difference on all but the high end systems.
I have a bunch of cassettes from the early 80s with recordings from local radio stations when they had 45 minute long music blocks. I'd set it to record and go over the recording later to see if there were any songs I wanted. I'd then transfer all the songs I wanted to a single cassette. Guess I never recorded over the originals. Kind of like a time capsule being opened. You get the old DJs, music and commercials.
tugboat
09-09-2008, 06:07 PM
So how do you guys maintain your cassette decks? Is there any maintenace you have to perform, like cleaning the heads, changing belt drives, etc?
Get some non shedding cleaning swabs, head cleaning solution (you can use isopropyl alcohol) and a good head demagnatizer. How much you use the cassette deck will dictate how often you clean it. I usually clean the heads every 10 hours of play/rec and demagnatize the heads every 3 months or so.
Do not use the alcohol on any of the rubber parts, only the metal heads, capstan and shafts. For the rubber parts, you can get some Rubber Renew and it will clean and condition them.
heiney9
09-09-2008, 06:29 PM
Teac used to make a 2 step process. One stpe was cleaning the heads and capstans and the other was a special rubber conditioner for the pinch roller. I have some left but it's like 10 years old and I won't use it; it smells funny.
Look online there should be several hobbyist sites that should give you tips. If you do Isopropyl alcohol make sure it's 90% or better. Most over the counter cheap stuff is 75-80%.
Rat Shack used to carry the non-shedding long cotton tipped sticks for getting in there. I'd stay away from a "commercial" all-in-one cleaning system unless you know a lot about it; ie; read testimonials somewhere as to how it works.
Try sites like Crutchfield.
H9
shadowofnight
09-09-2008, 08:16 PM
Here is a Dragon on the cheap :D
http://sfbay.craigslist.org/sby/ele/830895608.html
Rare Nakamichi Dragon Cassette Deck - $650 (campbell)
I used to use tech wipes ( In cotton swab looking form ) so the cotton wouldnt have a chance to leave material behind.
Monster Jam
09-10-2008, 01:29 AM
Ironic. I just mentioned to my wife that I am considering destroying all of my tapes: Tapes I recorded from Vinyl - now long gone, another tape, or CD
Original recording tapes
I have it all on CD now, and the 4 tape cases are just eating shelf space and deteriorate a little every year.
I'll probably hang on to the Pioneer deck. I have matching Pioneer receiver and CD player. They are obsolete too.
ben62670
09-10-2008, 01:45 AM
I had a Blaupunkt Monterey and what a tape player that was. I also had an Alpine pre only head unit with an awesome tape deck. The Blaupunkt Monterey killed it!
doctorcilantro
09-17-2008, 06:38 PM
I picked one of these up last year:
Long live "analog"
DC
steveinaz
09-17-2008, 06:43 PM
I had a Teac Z-6000, it was a beaut. dbx nosie reduction, manual bias pot adjustments, the works. I used my Teac X200RBL reel-to-reel head cleaner system on the casette deck for cleaning the heads and pinch rollers. Isopropyl can dry-out rubber--not good for pinch rollers. You need the blue rubber cleaner/conditioner.
doctorcilantro
09-17-2008, 08:07 PM
I picked one of these up last year:
http://us.st12.yimg.com/us.st.yimg.com/I/djtronix_2019_57991938 (http://www.copystars.com/images_products/tascam_112_mkii_s21422.jpg)
Long live "analog"
DC
Danny Tse
09-17-2008, 08:44 PM
So how do you guys maintain your cassette decks? Is there any maintenace you have to perform, like cleaning the heads, changing belt drives, etc?
Rat Shack used to carry the non-shedding long cotton tipped sticks for getting in there. I'd stay away from a "commercial" all-in-one cleaning system unless you know a lot about it; ie; read testimonials somewhere as to how it works.
LOL....I still have the Rat Shack long "Q-tips" left over from my cassette days. Got a Sony TC-670K 3-head 3-motor deck from the early 90s and it's in storage right now. I used to used the Allsop cassette path cleaning system for cleaning the pinch rollers and the capstans. For the heads, I'd pull the cleaning head off of the Allsop "cleaning cassette" and do it manually with the Rat Shack long "Q-tips". Then I would demagnetize the entire tape path with a Discwasher cassette-shaped demagnetizer. Of course, I also have a Radio Shack wand-type demagnetizer and a separate TDK cassette head demagnetizer at my disposal.
You can still get the Allsop cassette cleaning system....highly recommended!!
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