Tape Trail

not so much IMO

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linear tape speed is so slow and the track width so narrow... it is amazing what was accomplished with cassette tape, but the starting point was so compromised, it's really akin to hot-rodding a Yugo (or a Subaru 360, perhaps even more aptly).

Imagine if some of the formulation and NR 'technology' developed for cassettes had been put into consumer reel to reel tape?

A format like Beta (or VHS) HiFi -- which records audio via frequency (not amplitude) modulation using rotating heads onto video tape, offers economical analog recording of at least potentially very high quality and wide dynamic range.

I've actually done a lot of VHS HiFi audio recording (dubbing and live recording). The results are generally very good to excellent, and the tapes have held up well. We (still) listen to "holiday music" throughout every December via VHS HiFi, recorded at the slowest (linear) tape speed (i.e., 6 or even 8 hours per tape) and it sounds great.

holidaydubbing121209

Dubbing to VHS HiFi Audio from LP using a Zenith-branded deck we bought ca. 1986 (and still have). :)

all the best,
mrh


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