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I imagine most of us have other things we keep up on and use our took kit for.
For me – audio equipment with a strong interest in all things cassette.
Yes it is weird. I actually prefer cassettes over MP3 or CD.When I acquire another un-needed home deck or walkman, it is not a question of “does it work?” but “can I fix the problems?” Normally tape speed, head alignment, or belts are needed (belts especially in walkmans). Only one of my four Sony walkmans needs a belt but it is not my favorite one.
I am not sure if it’s normal to have two decks in a home stereo system, both of them Pioneer dual cassette auto-reverse, one of the decks (CT-W900R) is record-capable on both players. A lot of tape fans do not care for dual player decks nor auto-reverse.
My thing with tapes is they are really inexpensive (two for a buck at thrift stores) and just nostalgic. Yeah sometimes I come across a dud but no big loss.
One thing you get with tapes (besides some hiss) is better dynamic range. Too often new stuff that is digitally remastered (brick-walled) sounds like crap.
I have about 65 “Factory recorded” cassettes and about 60 blanks (Mostly type 1, I tend to sell off most of the type 2 I find, for a good profit) All blanks are Maxell or TDK.
Yes, cassettes can be a headache. Sometimes a certain player will just not play certain cassettes right even though both are working perfect. Strange… :huh: But, opening the decks, getting out my test equipment and tape, working out the problems, it gives me something to do. Pick up garbage and get it working is a great feeling.
The only player I still need to dig into is the one in my Acura. It just needs a cleaning and output level notched up a tiny bit.
What else do you like to mess around with?
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