obsessed with cassettes

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here are some vids of my vintage cassette decks, portable, and other pieces of equipment with cassette recorders/players.

link below is a vid of my 1967 sony tc-100 cassette recorder.

please note: the sony tc-100 model was release in 1966 and it was sony's 1st cassette recorder they ever made, but my unit was manufactured in early 1967.

 
Sony TCM-121 mono portable cassette tape recorder. Circa early 1970's. I recall using this to tape lectures in college. Still works, except I think the rewind button must be held down to work (it doesn't stay in rewind position otherwise). Fairly good sound, too.

It came with a leatherette case but that self-destructed long ago.

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WOW-Sony TCM121 cassette recorder-the agency I work for used to use these in some of its program recording work out in the feild.-such as interviews.They also used the larger TCM 110 machines and Sony 5000 cassette machines-before the transmitter site I worked on these neat little cass decks.Was fun.The agency ordered what was called "Belt-pulley" kits for the machines. Have installed lots of those.If one belt was worn-you were better off to replace them all--would be embarassing for the machine to fail in the feild during a critical interview of a famous person!Now--sadly the cassette machines at the agency are gone-have gone to "memeory stick" recorders.
 
I used to work for a company in Maine that used to make Audio cassettes. I was there for 11 years and I learned alot about what goes into them. The clear cassettes with the black bridge is called a Mark 10. The idea behind it was that it could sound like a CD and often times it did. The black bridge was floating to align with the playback head and the spring pad was wider. Most pads are made of felt and some were made with poron. The wider the more tape contact with the head.
The shells of the clear cassette were made with polysar polycarbonate...the hubs ABS and the rollers were sometimes made of delrin if they were white and polyethylene if they were black. the Mark 10s were 5 screw and some were sonically welded. The plant used to pump out well over 8 million cassettes a week going full bore with all 3 shifts 7 days a week. And that was when cassettes still outsold CD's. Today its hard to find a US manufacturer of audio cassettes...they dont exist anymore that I know of. Oh and we used to make 8 Tracks and reel to reels.
 
lot of the 60's and early 70's tape recorders the rew or ffwd button dont' lockdown. my craftsman 1000 and sony tc-100 are like that.
 
The Sony 5000 RWD and FF buttons could lock if you pressed them all the way down-light pressure allowed them to work and stop when you let go-was useful for "Q-ing" to a spot on the tape you wanted to play.
 
Here is a Panasonic mini cassette unit, and a '67 Magnavox reel to reel. The Panasonic is from around '76 I'm guessing.

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An early attempt

Philips (/Norelco) introduced the Compact Cassette in 1964, primarily for dictation use. Later, they would introduce the far inferior (but much smaller) Mini Cassette.

Before all that, however, they came up with this, less successful, cartridge system.

I don't have a player for it -- I've never even seen one.

-kevin

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Anyone have one of those Uher Model 4000's? Those were legendary for reporters and such. The best sound quality ever on a cassette. They still fetch tons of money on Ebay.

FWIW, my Mazda Tribute came with both a CD changer AND a cassette player! It's mounted right below the CD layer and since all the controls for it are mounted on the CD, they are integrated together. I'm usually the kind of guy who upgrades the standard factory radio and speakers to Alpine/Jbl or such, but this system sounds just as good as those!
I am very happy because I too have a large collection of cassette tapes.

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