Love Em or Hate Em - Cassettes are Back w/t this TEAC!!!

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  • @clarencehoover6748
    @clarencehoover6748 3 місяці тому +34

    Long live PHYSICAL media! 💜

    • @jukingeo
      @jukingeo 2 місяці тому

      I like physical media as well, just not in the form of a cassette or 8-track for that matTer.

  • @homer53029
    @homer53029 3 місяці тому +51

    ......When I was 16 I think my systen consisted of a 60 WPC Onkyo receiver, a belt driven Technics turntable, a TEAC cassette player, and JBL 12" 3-way floor standers .....we would record the albums we bought the first time out the sleeves, then put them away to keep them 'pristine' .....

    • @dinosaursr
      @dinosaursr 3 місяці тому +6

      I bought the whole Beatles collection on vinyl from my brother in law who played them once and copied them on cassette. Score!

    • @michaelrossmaessler200
      @michaelrossmaessler200 3 місяці тому +8

      That's better than 95 percent of 16 year olds have ever had for a system 🙂

    • @thomaswomack3888
      @thomaswomack3888 3 місяці тому +2

      yeah buddy, that was a winning strategy. It was on RARE occasion the record came back out of the sleeve again unless it was to re-record the LP in question a second time because you spilled your coffee on the tape you made.

    • @oohmeconkers1968
      @oohmeconkers1968 3 місяці тому

      @@homer53029 a fine system for a 16 year old. I had a Pioneer PL115D, Shure M75ED cartridge, an A&R Cambridge A60 amp and a pair of Linn Index speakers!!
      Later upgraded to Linn Axis Turntable and a Rotel Pre Power that i kept for 30 years nearly!!
      Recently replaced pretty much everything… does it sound loads better .. prob not but it makes me happy 🤣🤣😀

    • @axelfiedel3793
      @axelfiedel3793 2 місяці тому

      @@thomaswomack3888 or if the tape was eaten by the stereo

  • @eddents
    @eddents 3 місяці тому +38

    I remember taking a pencil and rotating a cassette to forward past the blank leader tape when recording an album onto tape. All the tweaking in putting an album onto tape to play in the car was a lot of fun and pride was taken in not recording a needle drop and in creating quality fade outs.

    • @ericelliott227
      @ericelliott227 3 місяці тому +4

      Ah, yes, I remember those days well!

    • @dropthehammer1360
      @dropthehammer1360 3 місяці тому +3

      I remember the happiness I felt when I bought my first cassette player with a record level knob. I also had a small Sony CD player that had an automatic fade out function, but that wasn’t as satisfying.

    • @svalbard01
      @svalbard01 3 місяці тому +1

      Normal, CrO2, or Metal?

  • @thoraudio2848
    @thoraudio2848 3 місяці тому +20

    I actually just got one of these from Goodwill a couple of months ago. Along with a Yamaha receiver and Polk towers and sub. All for $79. Got me back in the hobby. Had to fix the CD transport, but it works great.

    • @teekay_1
      @teekay_1 3 місяці тому

      All the rubber belts turn to mush. You need patience to get that cleaned out. And new belts are readily available as well.

    • @thoraudio2848
      @thoraudio2848 3 місяці тому +2

      @@teekay_1 Deoxit in the laser motor. Thx Techmoan!

    • @teekay_1
      @teekay_1 3 місяці тому

      @@thoraudio2848 I'll have to check him out. I'm subscribed, but I don't always get to his new videos.

  • @geographyinaction7814
    @geographyinaction7814 3 місяці тому +39

    TEAC was awesome in the 80's!!!

    • @ethimself5064
      @ethimself5064 3 місяці тому +5

      Too bad they no longer make Reel to Reels

    • @schweatty
      @schweatty 3 місяці тому +4

      TASCAM is the professional equipment division of TEAC

    • @Nordraw
      @Nordraw 3 місяці тому

      It’s 2024

    • @stevelouie5928
      @stevelouie5928 2 місяці тому +1

      I still have one of their cassettes that look like a reel to reel. I recently hooked up a walkman and played a tape through the aiyima a07 and it sounded decent.

    • @EsotericArctos
      @EsotericArctos 2 місяці тому

      Depends on the TEAC. In some markets TEAC was a rebranded cheap chineseum brand, in other markets you got genuine TEAC Japan. Teac Japan was, is awesome. They make a lot of broadcast quailty gear, and in some markets they did domestic. The "licensed" Teac palming off cheap crap was disgustingly bad.

  • @adamant3844
    @adamant3844 3 місяці тому +16

    I still have my first cassette deck a Nikko nd590II I bought new in 1980 for two bills. It has Dolby, tape bias, eq, volume knob, tape counter, record mute, VU meters etc..Oh yeah, it plays Metal tape too. I've soldered in quality interconnects and it sits on vibrapod isolators. Some cassettes like Centerfield by John Fogerty it sounds terrific.

  • @kevinstagi1497
    @kevinstagi1497 3 місяці тому +21

    Hi Fi time machines are wonderful! I have two open reel tape decks that bring great joy to my life.

    • @stephenstevens6573
      @stephenstevens6573 3 місяці тому +1

      Me too!! I reject nearly all of the new things. Dacs, streaming etc .. all of my three systems contain only vintage equipment. To me? It will always sound better!!

    • @annebokma4637
      @annebokma4637 3 місяці тому +3

      I didn't reject new stuff, but I sure do appreciate my revox open reel. Most of my gear I bought in '88 😂 and even then some of it was second hand 😂

  • @homer53029
    @homer53029 3 місяці тому +20

    LOL ....This is definitely my generation (I'm 60). I guess I hadn't noticed that you can even buy blank cassettes anymore....
    ....We used to make party tapes by recording specific songs from piles of LP's. ....It was a pain in the ass! (LOL!).... but fun ....it was certainly a skill if you were trying to blend. ....brings back memories
    .....THANKS!

    • @ericelliott227
      @ericelliott227 3 місяці тому +3

      Yes, did the same here and yes, it was not easy! I prided myself in it though because of all the work that went into it and I was known for my tapes as it happens.

  • @ForeverAnalog
    @ForeverAnalog 3 місяці тому +17

    I have a vintage booth in an antique mall and also sell at record and vintage clothing shows and cassettes sell like crazy for me, both used and new like you mentioned in this video. Keep in mind, a lot of kids are seeking out grunge/atl/new wave/punk stuff so I burn through Nirvana, Alice in Chains, Smashing Pumpkins, Cure, Depeche Mode, etc, etc. Oh yeah, I've been selling a TON of CDs to younger folks as well. I had a teenager ask me the other day "Which Sonic Youth album should I buy first?" and I almost replied, "Come here and let me give you a hug, son."

    • @eddents
      @eddents 3 місяці тому +1

      I had a tape of my favorite musician, made in 79/80 on my college roommate's TEAC (or Technics ?) dual cassette unit. That tape played for over half a decade and when played during its 6th year on a date, it helped forge a relationship now on its 35th year. If I could find the tape, I'd give it a thank-you hug!

  • @joecyclone
    @joecyclone 3 місяці тому +9

    I have some type II blank cassette recordings of vinyl records from the 70s that my uncle made. You'd swear you were listening to the record sometimes - they're that good. It probably helps that I'm listening to them on the machine they were recorded on, using JVC's own noise reduction system. Cassettes can sound good.

  • @MJ-ge6jz
    @MJ-ge6jz 3 місяці тому +12

    Physical Media is important because your streamer carriers tend to loose their licenses and then the product you purchased is confiscated!! It's happening with video game industry.

    • @Zimmy_1981
      @Zimmy_1981 3 місяці тому

      And internet and cc dependent. I had intermet probs what night and streaming was annoying, Inwas thinming, had I used my PM, I won't be in this situ😂

  • @johnstone7697
    @johnstone7697 3 місяці тому +15

    The problem is, that this nostalgiac journey back to cassettes is a mere shadow of its former self. Cassette used to sound very good on a machine like a Nakamichi, Tandberg, Revox, etc. These new machines are all based on a mediocre Chinese transport that has relatively high wow and flutter and often requires speed calibration from the factory. There's also no Dolby NR, which is what propelled cassettes into the hi fi world in the first place. Unlike vinyl, there just isn't enough demand to bring back the cassette format the way it was at its peak

    • @mickschnabel
      @mickschnabel 3 місяці тому +1

      There's been sales of cassettes hovering in the 400k+ area for the past couple years now however

    • @or1on89
      @or1on89 3 місяці тому +7

      @@mickschnabelNot enough, and not a reason to drop 500$ on a cassette deck worse than 150$ decks from 1992…

    • @mickschnabel
      @mickschnabel 3 місяці тому +1

      @@or1on89 I understand , but I've actually had two of these now for almost 4 years. I paid $300 at the time.

    • @Chipicui
      @Chipicui 3 місяці тому +3

      The lack of Dolby makes it totally unsuitable for me. I have almost 250 cassettes, all recorded with Dolby B or mostly C, and as many of you will know, the compander used on recording with these noise reduction systems makes them sound horrible if not properly decoded in playback.
      And I’ve heard that the cheap chinese mechanism used in all cassette players today is the exact same, awful quality…
      A pitty really for all of us who have lost or broken our old real high quality machines.

    • @mdavisyates
      @mdavisyates 3 місяці тому

      Yeah I was hee to make the same comment. TEAC/TASCAM hasn't stopped making this model line. They just dropped off the quality post 2000. That's when the Tenashin transport took over in practically every cassette deck.

  • @DJCray8472
    @DJCray8472 3 місяці тому +9

    It is a shame, that Dolby don't sell licenses for the Noise Reduction B, C and S

  • @ddy3smptr
    @ddy3smptr 3 місяці тому +2

    When I listen to License to Ill now my brain still expects to hear the couple of spots where my tape was chewed up when I was a kid. Scarred forever.

  • @shanedaiken2831
    @shanedaiken2831 3 місяці тому +11

    I love the physical contact of putting the cassette or cd in. I would cringe when people would overlook the button and PUSH the cd tray with their finger...ugggh. Great video!

  • @walterbrown2179
    @walterbrown2179 3 місяці тому +4

    I picked up a JVC dual-cassette deck at Goodwill, just to see if it would actually play my tapes and was pleasantly surprised! The wave of nostalgia that I felt was immediate. My hands knew what to do and turned the cassette case into a fidget toy, of course, and the familiar opening and closing along with the boo-boo-boo-boop tape intro sound was just too much fun. I still had my old cassettes, and haven't really added any new ones, but it's been a fun memory trip!

  • @amazoidal
    @amazoidal 3 місяці тому +6

    I have a 90s Kenwood carousel CD player with Toslink output.

  • @pdcragin33
    @pdcragin33 3 місяці тому +9

    Somewhere, likely in Japan, someone is plotting a Sony MiniDisc revival.

    • @ArunPaul-Malaysia
      @ArunPaul-Malaysia 3 місяці тому +1

      😅 Yea

    • @mickschnabel
      @mickschnabel 3 місяці тому

      @@pdcragin33 man I wish! But I mean have you seen the price of used mini discs lately!!?

    • @sanderhamerslag7050
      @sanderhamerslag7050 2 місяці тому

      still have and listen to minidiscs regularly plus I have a very nice Sony MDS-JB920QS deck ,very handy to make compilations using the internet and can use the digital input to make digital recordings

  • @oohmeconkers1968
    @oohmeconkers1968 3 місяці тому +7

    I loved everything about the cassette experience.. especially opening a brand new blank one.. I’d make endless mix tapes as I used to drive a lot. I swapped to CD in the car with a multi change player but it wasn’t the same!!
    Good call cheapaudioman…
    I can smell the new cassette…:::😂

  • @smkordis
    @smkordis 3 місяці тому +2

    A good deck. Quality blank tape. Add your favorite songs, by playing the LP, and putting the LP away until the tape wears out. Which actually can be a long time. Sit back, shoot pool or play cards. Enjoy the music. I have been doing this since I switched from 8 track to cassette. Saved a lot of wear on the albums.

  • @randymeinholdt4401
    @randymeinholdt4401 3 місяці тому +2

    Randy, a few months ago I dug out of storage my old (1985) Nakamachi BX-300 3 head Cassette deck and thought what the heck lets hook it up again. Some of the OLD recorded tapes sounded terrible. However, I only bought just a few pre-recorded tapes. But I usually recorded my own "mix tapes' so I could have a variety of my favorite songs. In my box was a New Old Stock of Denon metal cassette blanks never used. I recorded a Led Zeppelin mix tape with all my favorite cuts and it was INCREDIBLY good....Not if you sit down and are critical of every aspect. But a venue to put on your favorite tunes for 45 non stop favorites while working around the house....it is PERFECT way to enjoy the fun of the 70 and 80/s

    • @cb2000a
      @cb2000a 2 місяці тому

      Ahh yes...metal tape and a good 3 head deck=Magic.

  • @paulthevol
    @paulthevol 3 місяці тому +1

    What brings a smile to my face is the sound of the tape ending on one side and then the auto reverse flipping the head unit over for continued musical enjoyment. I buy cassette decks at thrift stores and estate sales when I find them, some times I hit something good, sometimes they need a little work. I love the nostalgia of cassettes!

  • @Simon_Hawkshaw
    @Simon_Hawkshaw 3 місяці тому +3

    What lovely eye candy, and I'm sure dulcit tones for the ears, too. Takes me back to my distant youth. Thanks for your review, perspectives, and for sharing this with us all.

  • @foldspacenavigator6011
    @foldspacenavigator6011 3 місяці тому +3

    Yup and Time Machine nostalgia & experience sells. Not with CDs or tapes though I got back into vinyl. Especially with Metal, psychedelic and other heavy stuff. Love it.

  • @deanagoes2791
    @deanagoes2791 3 місяці тому +4

    still listening to my old cassettes on my old sony walkman.

  • @BobbyTwoTimes
    @BobbyTwoTimes 3 місяці тому +1

    Gonna stick with the new ways of listening, but it's awesome that all of this still exists. Thanks, Randy.

  • @guidoastolfoni
    @guidoastolfoni 3 місяці тому

    I still have a perfectly working Teac V1010 cassette player from 1993 and I recently purchased a TASCAM CD-RW900SX CD recorder to record the CDs I love most from streaming directly to digital without intermediate analog conversions with a digital transport connected to the PC with a USB connection. Fantastic result! Long live CDs and long live cassettes!

  • @daselsor
    @daselsor 3 місяці тому +3

    Hilarious! I recently snagged one of these off eBay, along with a couple vintage Walkman style cassette players. Burned some mix CDs, then used those to produce old school mix tapes. Have no idea why, as I have a decent DAP. But took me back to the 80’s. Keep up the great content!

  • @YesMF
    @YesMF 3 місяці тому +1

    I've been collecting tapes for about 8 years, and they are my go-to media. They sound better, than people remember them, and they are loads of super interesting underground releases. I love the diy tape label scene.

  • @onsenkuma1979
    @onsenkuma1979 3 місяці тому +3

    Except in a high ambient noise environment like a car, cassettes recorded without noise reduction (e.g. Dolby B, C or S) are low fidelity. If cassettes are to make any meaningful sort of comeback then this will have to be addressed. I have an early 90s 3-head Denon with Dolby C/HX Pro, and numerous mix tapes I made 25-30 years ago from CD and vinyl sources, using either Type II (chromium dioxide) ot Type IV (metal oxide) tape. These still sound fantastic.

    • @keithwiebe1787
      @keithwiebe1787 2 місяці тому +1

      They did make some digital cassettes toward the end of cassettes. Never caught on.

    • @onsenkuma1979
      @onsenkuma1979 2 місяці тому

      @@keithwiebe1787 That's true - the DCC (digital compact cassette). As I recall the units could play (not record) analog cassettes as well. The format appeared after DAT and around the same time as the Minidisc. Other than musicians, though, almost no one got into DAT, and neither Minidisc nor DCC really went anywhere. Format fatigue?

    • @keithwiebe1787
      @keithwiebe1787 2 місяці тому

      @@onsenkuma1979 Yes, I was considering a DAT but really had it later with my video 8 digital camcorder. I actually recorded some good sounding music by running line into from my mixer board into my digital 8 audio inputs. Sounded fine. DACs in there sounded fine to me. Some of the best voice and piano music I've heard.

    • @БранимирПетров
      @БранимирПетров 7 днів тому

      I'm listening to Type IV recorded tapes in my car, without Dolby. No complaints sound wise so far. It would be better with Dolby , of course, but not that big of a deal.

  • @cnhhnc
    @cnhhnc 3 місяці тому +2

    I got started with cassettes in Grad School. Bought a $199 compact AIWA boom box and started collecting. Was living in NYC at the time so tapes were everywhere. On the streets, in record shops, at the Tower Records extension at cheap prices. And of course I made my own tapes, who didn't. Walkmans? Sure, used to jog with one. I collected about 200 tapes, most of which I still have and sometimes play. My main deck needs BELTS-the main pain of cassette decks, those cheap rubber belts that ALWAYS go bad eventually. Now TELL Me, do you THINK they couldn't make some kind of synthetic carbon/silicon belt that would LAST for decades? Nah, obsolescence and inconvenience. Of course the SAME is true of belt driven TTs but they are much EASIER To replace. Try replacing a cassette belt, lol!
    Oh well, currently I have a Kenwood dual deck cassette player (bought at a Goodwill for 12 dollars) with one side probably needing belts soon and the other, fingers crossed, still OK. My old deck is in the basement, needs SERVICE and belts, and I already replaced those belts ONCE already.
    Oh the memories! The '80s boys and girls, those were the days in NYC before it became a Yuppie Wonderland. A wet dream for the so-called luxury unit market (Trump et al). Now no one can afford to live there and a lot of buildings are just EMPTY! (Actually, a lot of that began in the mid to late 80s). So it's really the 70s and early eighties that were manageable for students, workers and the poor).
    These combo units used to sell for less than $300. Now, over $500, WOW. Inflation! Can it really cost that much to make those in China?

  • @fueledgaragetv1212
    @fueledgaragetv1212 3 місяці тому +3

    Bought a 90s car with a perfect full logic cassette player, thought I would love cassettes again so went to the vintage store and bought some cassettes. Was loving them for 2 days until it ate a tape. Now I hate cassettes all over again.

    • @pdcragin33
      @pdcragin33 3 місяці тому +1

      LOL an old truth re-emerges.

    • @richardheumann1887
      @richardheumann1887 3 місяці тому

      Just part of the "experience" ...

    • @skald9
      @skald9 3 місяці тому

      Didn't you clean it?

  • @Oldcrow77
    @Oldcrow77 3 місяці тому +2

    Have new belt being put on my Pioneer elite tape deck now
    As an old Dead head/ taper
    I’ve always known and loved the FAT sound of a well recorded Tape.
    I’m a analog guy trapped in a digital world

  • @Relayer56
    @Relayer56 3 місяці тому +2

    I guess it's high time to dig out my old (1982) Nakamichi 480 ! Unfortunately, by now it's probably a lot like me... needs a lot of work

  • @purrito4424
    @purrito4424 3 місяці тому +1

    I made some mix-tapes for my friends. Now I just need to buy them one of these, too.

  • @Beethoven5th
    @Beethoven5th 3 місяці тому +7

    Randy, I really like TEAC and TASCAM but I checked the specs online which say this will only create a 128k mp3. 320 is the bare minimum standard.

    • @keithwiebe1787
      @keithwiebe1787 2 місяці тому

      Bare minimum for what? I rip mine into wave files at 60k variable and they sound fine in my car. Way better than cassette's ever did.

    • @Hyxtryx
      @Hyxtryx 2 місяці тому

      @@keithwiebe1787 First of all, there is no such thing as a "60k variable wave file". You're talking nonsense. 2. Nobody plays WAV files in their car. 3. Only a fool would convert an MP3 file to a WAV file; you gain nothing except wasted disc space!
      Re: "Bare minimum for what?"
      Bare minimum for a quality MP3 file, of course! ...which is an odd thing to say, since 320kbps is the highest quality MP3. But it's just saying that if you cannot create a 320kbps (highest quality) MP3 file, the product is junk. AVOID IT! The manufacturer is purposely crippling the sound quality. If this Teac can only create 128kbps MP3s, it's G-A-R-B-A-G-E ! ! ! They definitely don't want you creating a "mix-thumbdrive" and giving it to your friends!

    • @keithwiebe1787
      @keithwiebe1787 2 місяці тому

      @@Hyxtryx I opened some of my files. One album was ripped at 88 kbps. I use variable rate WMA. I rip cds not mp3 files. It is more than fine for car usage. Way better quality than cassette ever was that's for sure. Have you ever ripped cds to WMA?

    • @Hyxtryx
      @Hyxtryx 2 місяці тому

      @@keithwiebe1787 Oh, WMA. I've never ripped to WMA. I was taking issue with "60K variable WAV". There very well could be 88 kbps variable WMA, I don't know. I suspect you might be thinking of 88 KHz sampling rate, though, as 88 "kilobits per second" is a pretty low bitrate.

    • @keithwiebe1787
      @keithwiebe1787 2 місяці тому

      @@Hyxtryx In variable rate the propertie of kbps can be practically anything. Depends on the subject matter.

  • @toddlee2571
    @toddlee2571 3 місяці тому +1

    No. I ditched my tape deck as soon as i bought my first CD burner. And that was back when you could still buy premium Type 2 or 4 cassettes. No one makes those cassettes anymore, and you'll pay through the nose to buy a used type 2 or 4 blank cassette. You can still find new/old stock, but it's crappy type-1 blanks. And when I did record on high-quality blanks, it was from a CD. When you buy new vinyl, its vinyl that was mastered and cut from a digital source, recorded using digital equipment. At least vinyl is (can be) a hi-fi medium. The majority of cassette decks ever sold never met the hi-fi standard. The ones that did cost several hundred dollars. And don't get me started on turntables with bluetooth connectivity.

  • @ACBMemphis
    @ACBMemphis 3 місяці тому

    Physical media, especially CD, is great - no tracking, no DRM, instant on without buffering or waiting.

  • @blindpinballer6878
    @blindpinballer6878 3 місяці тому

    I almost got rid of my tapes since I don’t have a tape deck at the moment. I had planned on getting one again but my wife and I were trying to down size. I have a couple of demo tapes from friends that are no longer with us and no matter what those were staying but in order to maintain domestic tranquility I agreed to get rid of the rest of the tapes and she agreed to let me replace them with records. A pretty sweet deal since she has no clue what tapes I have but then I saw your video about that portable tape deck and I started getting cold feet. The day came for my tapes to leave with our donations and I couldn’t do it. I ended up sending my blacksmith’s post drill in their place and tranquility was maintained. My wife even told me to buy a tape player. I almost bought a different Tascam/Teac deck but the manual says do not play 90 min tapes and that was a deal breaker for me. I’m now looking for a vintage deck. Oh and just for the record I agree tapes can suck but I’m not really an audiophile. I just like to enjoy my music. Nothing like the tactile experience of being able to interact with your musical media or just walking over and cranking that volume knob up. Remotes are for collecting dust.

  • @VinylsFinal
    @VinylsFinal 3 місяці тому

    I still use vintage TEAC 122 MkIII cassette deck, 2 Akai decks, 2 Denon decks, 2 Sonys, 1 Technics deck, and these are the cassette decks that do fantastic recording. I can't say the same for anything new.

  • @maryrafuse2297
    @maryrafuse2297 3 місяці тому

    Actually the Cassettes allow artistic liberty in that different formulations of the tape inside the plastic housing influence the recorded sound. So you have the chance to play with Dolby and tape formulations. It is real fun allowing the sound to please your particular ears.

  • @rayzorwood905
    @rayzorwood905 3 місяці тому +1

    My current CD player is a Laserdisc player I found at a thrift shop last year. Got bit by the retro tech bug a couple of years back, when I got a stupidly heavy 36" Sony Trinitron off FB Marketplace. I originally bought it as a Laserdisc player, and a happy little surprise was that it had a CD Tray too :D Loving the videos of yours I've watched thus far, ever since I was looking for a few finer points on how to connect a subwoofer to the AV Receiver I found a few months back, but finally got around to playing with.
    Maybe someday I'll get up to the big boy toys you're showing, but for now, Ima scrounge for deals at the thrift shops, so if I fux up and blow something up/out, I ain't out big bucks haha.
    Though damn if that TEAC unit isn't just that, so tempting and pretty.

    • @cheapaudioman
      @cheapaudioman  3 місяці тому

      Dude! I got a pioneer laser disc with a separate cd tray from one of my patrons. And I think I had that sony. It made it through a hurricane and weighed probably 200 lbs

  • @rbnhd1144
    @rbnhd1144 3 місяці тому

    I still have my first cassette tape that came free with the Cassette recorder back in 1972, I have all my cassettes and still listen to old radio shows on them.

  • @patrickgeorge141
    @patrickgeorge141 3 місяці тому +1

    When cd's came out after belonging to all the tape clubs through the mail. I was frustrated that in a way we were forced to buy the new cd's. I do not stream any longer and only listen to cd's. I have the Onkyo DX-390 6 disc player and the Integra CDC 3.4 6 disc player. While the Onkyo functions good the Integra has a five year warranty versus the Onkyo's 1 year warranty. Well worth the extra money on the Integra for me. Both feed my dac's great!

  • @wendell7379
    @wendell7379 3 місяці тому +8

    Sorry, I came across this machine not so long ago. A total mediocre tape section. No Dolby B,C,S or HX. Simple capstan drive with high wow & flutter. Better find a 2nd hand tape deck from the past area on the higher end section. That tapedeck section on this one is not designed to last long and really is considered very low end for a tape deck.

  • @obotish1981
    @obotish1981 3 місяці тому

    i started off with a Sony Discman D-141 w/Mega Bass playing MJ in 92 or so, i loved the digital screen, the sound the CD-ROM made, the colors of the disc, and those ear phones takes me back

  • @kudtarkarsandroid2500
    @kudtarkarsandroid2500 3 місяці тому +1

    The reviews say it doesn’t have auto stop so keeps going even after the tape has run out!!!

    • @stevesstuff1450
      @stevesstuff1450 3 місяці тому +3

      They're wrong. I've had one these Teacs for a few years now; it has auto-stop on Play, FF, and RW.

    • @gottapes
      @gottapes 2 місяці тому

      @@kudtarkarsandroid2500 i can confirm it has auto stop

  • @burtnull2245
    @burtnull2245 3 місяці тому +1

    Currently in the process of transferring my 40+ year old collection of cassette tapes to mp3 files using one. 100+ tapes = 200+ albums. Some recorded from the radio complete with DJ and commercials.

    • @Beethoven5th
      @Beethoven5th 3 місяці тому

      It only creates an mp3 file at 128k. Not good enough...minimum acceptable is 320k.

  • @FasuloA
    @FasuloA 3 місяці тому +1

    I think the biggest disappointment for me in newer stuff is no more Dolby NR. All my tapes would sound just a little off.

  • @sandwaves5642
    @sandwaves5642 3 місяці тому +3

    No CD recording in this machine = NOT GOOD !!!!!
    Actually - buying ( or if one already has ) a decent Blue-ray/DVD/CD recorder + a DOUBLE deck cassette player/recorder, will not deprive from much more space ! - how BIG is a Blu-ray/DVD recorder ?!

  • @yournightmare9999
    @yournightmare9999 3 місяці тому +2

    This is classic great stuff 👌 80s 90s vibe

  • @GeneSavage
    @GeneSavage 3 місяці тому +1

    I still have tons of cassettes, just because I have never had a high enough quality deck to pull everything on them, off of them. I'd rather NOT go back, thank you. 🙂
    CDs, on the other hand, never went away in this house. Yes, I listen to tons of streaming, but CDs are the perfect platform for music. 44.1 kHz gives us every frequency we can hear; 96 db is more dynamic range than we can comfortably listen to; 85+ db of stereo separation again is one channel SCREAMING at me while the other is silent. IMD: 0.0025% or less. THD: 0.05% at 1 kHz. Both inaudible. No wow. No flutter. No rumble. No clicks, pops, surface noise... and if properly built, a CD should last far beyond my lifetime.
    Every problem with every problem CD ever made has been the source fed to the CD, NOT the CD platform. What's not to love?

  • @maxwellclark7054
    @maxwellclark7054 3 місяці тому

    I had alot of Teac & technics gear in the 90's. I was a kid then and got those two brands mixed up. I miss buying used a/v equipment just for the heck of it from garage sales/random shops in the area, then taking them home to see how they sound.

  • @davidduran9388
    @davidduran9388 3 місяці тому

    Cassettes take me back to the days when I was a young man in my 40’s

  • @geographyinaction7814
    @geographyinaction7814 3 місяці тому +6

    I love this! In 91, I bought a full Nakamichi stack, CD, Receiver, Paradigm 9SE's. I know, does two comopnents make a stack?
    J&A Stereo Sound in Prince George, BC had a show at a hotel, and as a young 23-year old pulp mill employee I was approved to finance the lot.
    A few weeks later I found a used Nak cassette deck at the same shop, RX 505...the 3-head model with the bay window...the cassette would flip around instead of auto reverse for better sound. When they came upon a 'Dragon', I grabbed that too!
    Those were the days!

    • @Oldcrow77
      @Oldcrow77 3 місяці тому

      You got a Dragon! Nuff said!

  • @harlandheuter417
    @harlandheuter417 3 місяці тому

    There's just something about fiddling with controls, I loved my cassette decks more then my equalizer.

  • @kevindeem7174
    @kevindeem7174 3 місяці тому +1

    I have a nakamichi 2 head cassette deck, some of my new recordings from digital or analog I could fool some people that they are listening to a cassette, I love my hobby ❤️👍🏻

    • @Oldcrow77
      @Oldcrow77 3 місяці тому +1

      Love Naks
      With I had money for a dragon
      Have my Pioneer elite 3 head getting new belts etc now. My tech worked for pioneer in 80’s so I’m lucky to have him. He recapped my Yamaha CR-1020 last summer
      Oh the fat sound of a good analog recording

  • @Progfan1965
    @Progfan1965 3 місяці тому

    Where’s the FM tuner so that I can record songs from the top 40 onto cassette? That’s the 70s and 80s nostalgia I want!!!

  • @steverogers7611
    @steverogers7611 3 місяці тому +1

    Now try and find a preamp with a tape loop

    • @pdcragin33
      @pdcragin33 3 місяці тому

      Actually Yamaha integrated amps still have tape loops, but they are indeed the exception that proves your point.

  • @hawkins55
    @hawkins55 3 місяці тому

    When I came to the US for college 36 years ago, I brought my 100 plus cassettes with me. Also bought a pioneer cassette deck, Technics integrated amp, a Technics graphic equalizer and a pair of Realistic speakers from a graduating music major from college, pretty girl... Anyway, the deck, equalizer and the tapes are all still with me now.

  • @ValdemarDeMatos
    @ValdemarDeMatos 3 місяці тому

    It’s amazing. I’ve recorded hundreds of cassette tapes from my vinyls and CDs. But I don’t remember ever buying any original recording in cassette format. 😅

  • @mickschnabel
    @mickschnabel 3 місяці тому

    I've literally had TWO of these for almost 4 years now (they accidentally sent me TWO!) and I think back then I paid $300 for one. Last I saw, everywhere is asking closer to 400 at least nowadays. (I also love how the remote is VERY 90's-ish)

  • @stevenj2380
    @stevenj2380 3 місяці тому

    TEAC aims beyond entry level, too.
    A DD $749 TT perhaps worthy of consideration to some more well known in that price range, besides audiophile (has XLR out) manual belt TT at $1799..
    has varied line including 'Reference Series" with a $2699 CD transport and a $3799 'Dual Monaural USB/DAC CD Player/Pre-Amp/Headphone Amplifier' (we should all have LOL).

  • @gilbertwashburn7095
    @gilbertwashburn7095 3 місяці тому +4

    Thanks for the video that thing is cool I got my first cassette player in 1966 yeah I'm a old guy I still have all my cassettes yep at least 4 thousand and maybe buying more this weekend that's mental illness that's meHave a great day I'll keep watching it keeps me insane I asked my buddy how many cassette decks do you need he said all of them

  • @graemeschultz3273
    @graemeschultz3273 3 місяці тому +1

    Funny I still have my cassettes from 70’s and 80’s and have the kenwood deck still connected. Sound quality not as good but some of the tapes I have are not on streaming.

  • @brucesamuelson7541
    @brucesamuelson7541 3 місяці тому

    In 90 I had an 80 TA Kraco cassette 300 watt eq amp and Kicker box speakers- Rock On!

  • @wayneross9723
    @wayneross9723 2 місяці тому

    I have two top cassette decks and so many tapes I made from the 80s 90s and 2000s and still have a deck in my car.

  • @hifionthemoon2745
    @hifionthemoon2745 3 місяці тому

    Still have my 1990's TOTL cassette deck and still use it. Don't quite understand why cassettes are coming back but more power to them!

  • @adsph
    @adsph 3 місяці тому

    Interesting piece of gear. I have tapes from the 80’s. Commercial and one’s I made. I took care of them and so far they play fine.

  • @peterlundskow4061
    @peterlundskow4061 3 місяці тому

    I never left the revolution, I bought a Nakamichi 600 in late 70's, it made great tapes with high bias tapes, made lots of mix tapes for people back then. I did sell it off but bought a newer Nak about 7 years ago, it records & plays well. There were good quality prerecorded cassettes made in the day, I have found several for just a few bucks at thrift stores still!

  • @MetalGreggNY75
    @MetalGreggNY75 3 місяці тому

    Preach On, Brother Randy! I am right there with you.

  • @walterbkeen
    @walterbkeen 3 місяці тому

    For this price I'd probably seek out a working DCC deck that will also give you a digital output. Just make sure it has been recapped.

  • @GlennBerrySQL
    @GlennBerrySQL 3 місяці тому +1

    Heh, at 5:55 you talk about being able to buy one of four turntables at your local Walmart. That is not quite true (from my personal experience and from the screenshot you show). You can buy a terrible Crosley or Victrola "all-in-one" or you can get an Audio-Technica AT-LPGO-BT, but that is it. The Audio-Technica AT-LP140XP-BK is not sold at brick-and-mortar Walmart's and the Mainstays 1 Tier Plastic 12" Diameter Nonskid Turntable in the screenshot is a "lazy susan" turntable.

    • @Beethoven5th
      @Beethoven5th 3 місяці тому

      Well, You could order at store and pickup later. 😁

  • @qthevideos1806
    @qthevideos1806 3 місяці тому

    I've always been more of a CD kid, as young as I am. But getting this would have me considering the idea of asking my family if they're willing to give me any of their cassette collections. Hopefully they still have them!

  • @leftyguyiam
    @leftyguyiam 3 місяці тому

    I really enjoyed this review. I was ready to buy.... And then, the price. A hard no. For half that, I can get a nice Onkyo cd player (with optical out) and for another 150, a new cassette deck off Amazon.
    I have been having fun screwing around rebuilding a CD collection and lately, cassette (gasp!). I bought a realistic tape deck off eBay for like, 50 bucks. Cleaned it up (heads etc) and it works fine. Then I ordered a big box of cassette tapes from back in the day. You know what? I was stunned at how good some of those tapes sound! I mean some are 30-40 years old. I never would have dreamed this. Anyway, it has been fun to realize what a pain in the ass it was to listen to our music back then!
    Cassette tapes in my area can be had for around 10-15 cents at Goodwill. At these prices, you don't care if the tape is shot. Just a fun thing to mess around with.

  • @LarryMarsh
    @LarryMarsh 3 місяці тому

    Still playing my cassettes on my Marantz DA2452 and CDs in my Pioneer PD-5700. Through a Pioneer SX-50, Realistic STA-112 and Yamaha RX-V470. Also got a Technics SL-PD1010. Got a MCS 3536 Cassette Desk that I need to replace the belt on.

  • @ronnyb5890
    @ronnyb5890 3 місяці тому

    being from the 60s myself i had a lot of those components, i still have some TEAC components, i dont use them anymore though
    to spice up my recordings from vinyl to cassette i bought 2 fairly expensive DbX components, an 3 channel expander
    and a DbX II noise reduction (90Db+) unit, the only downside is that you'll have to play the Dbx cassettes through the noise reduction unit
    but the sound was high quality, nowadays i compress all my CDs to FLAC and MP3
    i still have some vinyl but no more cassettes, but i think those cassettes would be warped by age now, just like me 😂

  • @johntucker2318
    @johntucker2318 3 місяці тому

    I snapped one asap, I could hardly wait to get online and grab one from Target. It arrived today! Last I attempted to use my Marantz 5010B all that came out was a hi pitched buzz. So while I find someone to fix the the Marantz I can feed my cassette/CD fix.

  • @Renniz72
    @Renniz72 2 місяці тому

    It should have a phosphorus display, digital output on the CD and Dolby noise reduction. Price should be $350.

  • @trucchuong1726
    @trucchuong1726 3 місяці тому

    Another great useful feature of this TEAC is that it is capable of recording playing music from its cd player into the USP, so the USP can be played back in your cars (most of the cars nowadays don't have cd player) or other devices.

    • @Beethoven5th
      @Beethoven5th 3 місяці тому

      Only makes a 128k mp3. 320 is lowest recommended.

    • @trucchuong1726
      @trucchuong1726 3 місяці тому

      @Beethoven5th In this case, the recorded usp is still better than that cassette tape sound quality.

    • @Beethoven5th
      @Beethoven5th 3 місяці тому

      @@trucchuong1726 Cassette has full sound spectrum. 128 mp3 chops off some low and high frequencies to make small file. 128 MIGHT be bearable in a car but it's awful vs 320.
      Years of trial and error with mp3, etc. on USB in a vehicle port. 192k is the lowest mp3, etc. my ears can handle in a car.

    • @trucchuong1726
      @trucchuong1726 3 місяці тому

      @@Beethoven5th go read the spec. of this TEAC on frequency response and other data, available on TEAC website, then we'll talk. You can't just assume any mp3 formats in general vs. cassette tape formats.

    • @Beethoven5th
      @Beethoven5th 3 місяці тому

      @@trucchuong1726I already read the specs on this machine.
      FYI
      128 k is not designed to achieve 20khz let alone 16khz. I'm just trying to help. 🤔
      320k bit rate is minimum that one should use...
      even at 320 bit rate it feels compressed compared to CD/LP/Tape but at least it has full audio frequency spectrum.

  • @kenandbarbie-b6c
    @kenandbarbie-b6c 3 місяці тому

    I still have my Teac dual cassette deck with Dolby HX Pro. The most glaring deficiency with cassettes is the loss of high frequency, with the high end of 12 or 15 KHz, depending on the type of tape used. Dolby HX Pro reconstituted high frequency to the point where it made cassettes sound pretty good, & it was still backwards compatible, making it pretty universal. I’m surprised Teac didn’t incorporate this on this cassette/CD deck, but paying Dolby may be pretty costly & that may be the reason why.

  • @vladimirpasko8943
    @vladimirpasko8943 3 місяці тому

    Thanks for the great content. I love you for your attitude. You are awesome.

  • @richardheumann1887
    @richardheumann1887 3 місяці тому

    I love to have this experience again with my tapedeck that I bought. And it definitely NOT High end audio! But your run of the mil 80's Kenwood KX-57CW double cassette deck. And I love it! This is probably the second best system I ever owned... And I got it for less the 50 bucks with a decent amp receiver from Onkyo Tx8210R. Just need to get me a cd player at some time. i got it all second hand and it's great!

  • @pdcragin33
    @pdcragin33 3 місяці тому

    I recently threw out a mix tape cassette my cousin made from our 1966 summer in Greece, as the last cassette player left my life about 7 years ago. Then I thought, “Gee, there was only one song I ever really cared for” and searched for it on Qobuz. Found it! Not a well-recorded tune, but who could know that on cassette? And that, my friends, is the whole story for an audiophile like me.

  • @Final_Resolution
    @Final_Resolution 3 місяці тому

    Tapes were king when I was growing up. I didnt have my first cd player until around 1995.

  • @vanamonde2
    @vanamonde2 2 місяці тому

    I've had one a couple of years. Love it.

  • @RedSinter
    @RedSinter 3 місяці тому

    I saw this Teac and thought Awesome 💯 And immediately sighed realizing the loss of all my old tapes....😢... I've never given up on CD's abd while I have all my old 40-55 yr old Album's Cream, Led Zeppelin, Hall and Oates, etc ... Steely Dan ...Its Always...a Dan Fine Day ...

  • @adaboy4z
    @adaboy4z 3 місяці тому +5

    Where does this fit in for a guy who owns 9 tape decks and 4 CD players? 😂

    • @stephenstevens6573
      @stephenstevens6573 3 місяці тому +1

      Exactly)!!

    • @BobbyTwoTimes
      @BobbyTwoTimes 3 місяці тому +1

      Hilarious!!

    • @Oldcrow77
      @Oldcrow77 3 місяці тому +1

      Got a Dragon in the bunch?
      I wish I had a Nak, but alas I have a 3 head pioneer elite getting new belts and spa treatment as I write

    • @adaboy4z
      @adaboy4z 3 місяці тому +1

      @@Oldcrow77 No dragon, but a Nak RX-202, Yamaha KX-930 and Sony TC K96R are my best 3 performing decks.

    • @Oldcrow77
      @Oldcrow77 3 місяці тому +1

      @@adaboy4z all great
      And the 202 is sweet for sure !

  • @kaminobatto
    @kaminobatto 3 місяці тому

    I mean, seriously, what are the odds???!!! I was just checking this out the other day to see of it's back in stock on Amazon, it seems they can't keep enough of them on shelves! I already have a killer Nakamichi ZX-9 for my living room and the almost-CD-sounding Pioneer CT-W606 DR in my bedroom as we;; as the dual cassette decks on my Panasonic RX-DT55 boombox. Still, the idea of having all of the TEAC functionality in one device that looks this good is very lucrative. Unfortunately, they're being scalped due to high demand and only one online retailer in my country has them currently for close to 700 bucks. I would have immediately impulse-purchased one! Randy has a few years over me, but I also started with my first cassettes in the 80s' (1985 to be exact) and inherited a Toshiba RT-120S when my sister upgraded to her new and shiny Fairmate boombox... Great memories...

  • @ericelliott227
    @ericelliott227 3 місяці тому

    TEAC is the consumer/prosumer line of Tascam, which is the Pro line. I used to be a cassette master making mix tapes and such! I think I bought about 20 prerecorded cassettes back in the day. I hated pre-recorded cassettes. The cassettes I recorded onto were higher quality. I would not buy a prerecorded cassette today for sure and especially at those prices.
    One can record to tape on this unit I see, but where would one find blank recordable cassette tapes today? Good luck. Back in the day, I could buy blank high quality cassettes almost by the pallet for $20 (I think I may have done so a couple of times). I bought them by the brick, the 10 to 20 count brick! I never used Dolby NR in my recordings, it is awful. I had consumer level decks from the likes of Kenwood, Sony and at one point, in fact my last deck was a Nakamichi, not the Dragon (I did get to play with one once though, a real experience), but one notch below the Dragon. What a deck! The Kenwood models I had were good as well, but the Nakas where a different level.
    With the disappearance of the cassette and tape decks I got into CD recording and made a number of "mix" CDs. I still record CDs, but now it is for digitizing some vinyl. I use a Tascam unit for that (along with an audio editing program and studio monitors because one must re-master/mix at the top layer so to speak to get the recording back to as true as possible).
    There are no differences between DAC chips, Burr-Brown, Wolfson, Saber, whatever among type. Only the name is different, the difference is the implementation and output circuitry (op-amps and such). One can make a Burr-Brown sound brighter or not as laid back by different implementation or output circuitry. I have a preamp with a Burr-Brown DAC and a CD player with the same DAC and yet the CD player sounds better than the Preamp to my ears. (Yes, I can switch between them merely by when I hook the CD player using the RCA jacks I am using my Preamp DAC. When I hook the CD player up via optical or coax I am using the DAC in the player. I can also shut down any unused ports on the player).

  • @rachmanda4094
    @rachmanda4094 25 днів тому

    I've been saving up to buy this as a starter kit, it have cds and tape, found it BNIB in my local shop

  • @BostonMike68
    @BostonMike68 3 місяці тому +1

    Leave cassettes in the past. I remember them getting tangled, losing sound quality, rewinding and fast forwarding. I would rather listen to CDs or stream. But I think CDs have the best sound and much more dynamics than vinyl. I have compared my CDs to tidal and I can hear a big difference in sound with both running through my dac

  • @alholdway2003
    @alholdway2003 3 місяці тому

    I saw something like this in the army airforce base exchange in Europe during the 1980s.

  • @ArunPaul-Malaysia
    @ArunPaul-Malaysia 3 місяці тому

    Spyro Gyra cassettes in chrome would be the first tape I’d buy to complement this TEAC deck. 🎉

  • @LoneWolf-214
    @LoneWolf-214 Місяць тому

    I found myself a nice Nakamichi DR-3 and im loving that deck. It was mint conditon and got it for 150. Way better than what is being put out in these "modern" tape decks

  • @ingalook
    @ingalook 3 місяці тому

    My issue with units like these and other "recent" cd players is that TEAC and other manufacturers just doubled/tripled the price on 8-10 year old models without updating/upgrading them in any way.

  • @Louis-z7q
    @Louis-z7q 3 місяці тому

    I still miss my Technics RS-M85MKII. What a beautiful machine that was.

  • @owenjbrady
    @owenjbrady 3 місяці тому

    I like to own physical media, it takes up space and it costs money but I enjoy it

  • @jamesschneider3828
    @jamesschneider3828 3 місяці тому

    Not sure how many cassettes I copied for friends on my 1993 vintage Sony ES double cassette tape deck. Great machine,second from their top of the line model.

  • @datsunmadman
    @datsunmadman 3 місяці тому +1

    I am into recording on metal and chrome cassette