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268 lines
23 KiB
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268 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2844
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Title: HPR2844: The Sony TC-222-A Portable Reel-To-Reel Tape Recorder
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2844/hpr2844.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 17:52:40
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---
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This is HBR episode 2844 entitled The Sony DC 220 to a portable real tape recorder.
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It is hosted by John Culp and is about 31 minutes long and carrying a clean flag.
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The summary is, I talk about my latest rift or gadget, an 1969 Sony portable real tape recorder.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An honest host.com.
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Hey everybody, this is John Culp and left yet Louisiana and it's been a while since I recorded
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an episode but it's summertime now so I've got a little bit of time and so I wanted to record
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an episode about a new toy that I have. I don't have it in front of me right now. I will
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later record this in two parts at least maybe even more than that but the the new toy I have is
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related to something that I recorded about earlier. There was an episode about my Pioneer RT 707
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real to real tape deck and this episode is going to be about a new real to real tape machine that I got
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at the thrift store not too long ago. It is a Sony TC 222A portable real to real tape recorder
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and I've had it for at least a month now maybe a little bit longer but I haven't recorded
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about it yet because I was hoping I'd be able to record at least some audio on the machine
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itself but the record function's not working and I don't really know what's up with that but I'll
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talk more about the machine later. I'm maybe in doing things a little bit out of order here but this
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is just kind of how I'm thinking today. I watched an episode of there's a guy on YouTube that I
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really like called Techmone and he goes and looks at legacy audio equipment all kinds of outdated audio
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formats and video formats and stuff like that and the episode I watched today was about
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four hours of music onto a single cassette for one of those background music type machines that
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they used to play in stores. I mean nowadays you could just start a playlist or use Pandora or
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something like that and just have all the music you want going on indefinitely but back in the day
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you'd have to have some kind of pre-recorded sound and he's had a few episodes about different
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pre-recorded background music machines that I mean some of them are really crazy. There's this one
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with a gigantic cassette that I mean the cassette is probably like eight by 10 inches or something
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and it held something like 23 hours of music in one continuous tape loop and then he did one about a
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record changer that held about a dozen records and played both sides of the record at about 16
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revolutions per minute so it got a lot of sound on it that way. The machine that he looked at today
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was a cassette tape machine that played the tape at a slightly slower speed maybe 75% of the normal
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speed but also instead of doing recording both directions on the cassette in stereo it recorded
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four separate selections of music or four separate music tracks one on each of the four channels
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so there are two channels going one direction and two going the other and this thing
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recorded audio separate audio tracks on each of the four channels and this player would only play
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one of those channels at a time instead of playing in stereo so anyway you'd get a lot more music on
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the tape. Well this I say all this to set up what I'm about to do here this got me to thinking of how
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I could put a lot of music onto a fairly small tape reel because the portable reel to reel tape
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player that I got it uses five inch tape reels which don't hold as much tape as a seven inch reel
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and so theoretically you can't put as much music on them however it does have two speeds on the tape
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there is a what three and a quarter three and three quarters inches per second speed and then I
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guess a one and what would it be one and something a one and seven eight inches per second I think it's
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one and seven eight inches per second anyway it's much slower and I guess the idea was these
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machines were used for dictation probably but mostly recording spoken word because the audio
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quality is not great is I mean this is not something that you would want to play really good music
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good musical recordings back on for the pleasure of listening to them it was probably a dictation
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machine used in offices and so forth and maybe it was used during I don't know something like the
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Vietnam War where soldiers over in Vietnam would record audio messages and send them back home
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to their family on these smaller reels well you can record at that really slow speed and get a lot
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more time that way however the large tape deck that I have only has one of those speeds it has the
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three and a half inches per three points I forget what it is I'm sorry it's like three three
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and three quarters inches per second it has that speed and then it's got a faster speed seven
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and a half inches per second or 19 centimeters per second and 11 centimeters per second I believe
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are the indications given on the machine and the higher speed you record the better quality but the
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less time that you can get well I had the idea to record some music at four times it's normal speed
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onto a real to real tape recording on my RT707 at the seven and a half inches per second speed
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and then playing that same tape on the portable real to real tape deck at the one and seven eights
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inches per second speed which is a fourth of the original speed and that way I could get quite a
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lot of music onto a small real of tape so anyway I think I did the math right but I'm gonna walk
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through a couple of the steps to to get there right now so the music I'm going to use
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should warm Ken Fallon's heart it is a public domain music the open Goldberg variations and the
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open well-tempered Clevver recorded beautifully by Kamiko Ishizaka and this is music I featured
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in an earlier episode the one about the fugue it was recorded with a crowdfunding and immediately
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released in the public domain so I can use this music however I want including right now to
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demonstrate this so what I needed to do first of all was to get the music into a high speed
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format and there's a couple of little barriers to overcome so the the well-tempered Clevver is
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48 separate audio tracks each of which is between I don't know one minute and five minutes
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and what I need to do to make this easier is I want to speed all of those up but I also want to
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put them all into one giant audio track and so I can actually do this from the command line
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I've done the combination of audio tracks you know multiple tracks into one before using just
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a simple cat command CAT the the thing that you use to combine text files and whatnot it can
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also be used to combine audio files you just type the command cat and then a space and then whatever
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files you want to combine and then give it the greater than sign to redirect all of the output
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into a new file and you give it the new file name however first what I want to do is speed up
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all of these things and I'm going to do that by using the SOX command SOX it calls itself the Swiss
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Army Knife of audio editing and so the the command in SOX is you type SOX space and then the input
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file and then the name of the output file and then if what you're doing is changing speed you type
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the word speed and then a space and then you tell it the factor by which you want to change the
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speed so in this case I'm making it four times faster so my command would be SOX space input file
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space output file space speed space and then 4.0 now I've got 48 files to do this on so not surprisingly
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I wrote a little script that loops through them all and does them one at a time lickety split so
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this is a for loop so I say for i in asterisk.mp3 semicolon do and then on a new line I give it
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some sanity checks in file equals base name of dollar sign i I'll put this in the show notes so
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that you can just look at it and then I strip off the mp3 to give the the stem of the file name
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and then the output file is the stem of the file name followed by an underscore and then 4x
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indicating that it's four times the original speed and then the last line of the commands in the
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for loop is SOX space dollar sign in file space dollar sign out file space speed space 4.0
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and then I give it a sleep 4.1 seconds command just to kind of keep it from tripping over itself
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all right so I've already tried this on the open goldberg variations and it worked perfectly so
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now I'm going to do it on the open well tempered clavier I'm going to run the script so period slash
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4x auto complete and I've I've cd into the directory where all the files are and I press enter
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and I'm going to let it go it's fun listening to a command work isn't it um I should say that I
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look I I already recorded the entire open um the open art a few by JS Bach also recorded by
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Komiko Ishizaka onto a five inch reel and when I played it back on the tape deck it it started
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having funny sound issues about four or five minutes in and I'm not really sure why because when I
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played it back on my my nice tape deck with my big stereo it sounded beautiful and so I'm not
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really sure what the issue is we'll see if that happens again with this there are a couple of
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ways that I could go about getting this four times speed audio onto the real tape I was thinking
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I would just burn these two big tracks to an audio cd and then play the cd in my cd player I could
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also I guess I could play it straight from the laptop into the stereo as a source and then
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record from there I'm not sure exactly what's going to be best but the stereo is already set up
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for the cd to record to the tape deck so maybe that's the easiest thing to do okay it's finished
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and there they all are I just did a list command and see for every single one of the original
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files there is now a four x file let's listen to see what this sounds like so here's what the
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original prelude number three and c chart major sounds like it's all it's a pretty fast piece
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anyway it might even it might sound to you like this is four times speed even at its regular speed
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let's see this doesn't sound very good coming out of these little computer speakers
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okay and then the few that goes with it sounds like this
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do
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lovely okay now let's find this and open up let's open up the same pieces at four times speed
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here I go I've select them right click open with blc
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so that's the prelude
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actually that might be the few here's the here's the prelude
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okay that is really fast now here's the few again
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so if you're actually listening to this podcast at like one point seven times speed the way I do
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that's it's going to be practically inaudible anyway so I've got the files ready now and what I'll do
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before I record the rest of this is I will burn them to a CD and then I will transfer them to a
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five inch audio tape reel and when I come back I will play the tape from that reel in the
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console like in my audio rack tape deck and then I'll take that same tape and put it on my portable
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reel to reel tape deck and play it at the very slow speed which should bring it right back to its
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normal speed okay we'll see if this works like geeking out on audio stuff that has no practical
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value at all but it's kind of fun to do of course that's the kind of thing that hackers are known for
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all right y'all I will come back with more in just a bit
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okay all I'm back now I'm at my house and the so-called reading room in my house I'm sorry you
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might hear a little bit of air conditioner noise because the air conditioner is on but hopefully
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it won't be too bad so I've got now both of the real real tape players in the same room
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the and I'll talk about the little one first so I bought this I found this tape machine this
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again is a Sony TC 222A reel to reel tape recorder TC stands for tape quarter
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it is about 14 inches square about five inches thick ways about five or six pounds I guess it uses
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five inch reels it's got an enclosure thing that has a plastic window in it so you can see the
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reels spinning around I will put some pictures in a flicker album and I'll probably link to a
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YouTube video or two showing the thing in action I bought it on May 24th for five dollars at
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a hand up thrift store in Lafayette and when I got it I really had no way to test it to see if
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it was working because it did not have a power cord and I did not have any batteries it will run
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on four diesel batteries but I didn't have any at the time but I remember the very next morning
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I ran out to the hardware store and got some batteries and I put them in the machine and when I
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tried to turn it on I got a little bit of response the there was movement in the heads
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so when I turned it to the play position the take up reel had started moving
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and so I put a tape on there I had one five inch tape my brother's tape from one
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wear kids it was full of jazz music and he had and I have that tape now so I had one tape
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that would fit the thing it did come with a take up reel so I had a five inch tape and a take
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up reel and I put the tape in there and it moved but there was no sound so the tape was rolling
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no sound volume didn't do anything rewind worked but fast forward did not work
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and so I did what any hacker would do when something doesn't work I took the cover off and
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just took a look in there and it looked okay I decided to just start first of all I don't think
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I'd ever really looked inside of a real to real tape deck it's pretty cool there's all kinds of
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linkages and moving parts and you know you move one thing and it triggers a whole chain
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reaction of parts moving around and there's spinning wheel idler wheels take up wheels all kinds of
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cool stuff it had both belts in place and they were in decent condition considering how old the
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thing was the tape counter it worked that's something that did not work on my pioneer when I first
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got it the tape counter belt was broken on that one but the tape counter belt was in place on
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this one and working just fine although I did order a new pair of belts and replace them just
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because and it actually wasn't that hard to get at the access points for the belts to replace them
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either so what I did to try to get sound was I sprayed contact cleaner on all the contact
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electrical contact points I could find and voila next time I tried to push play I heard sound
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so playback started working the next order of business was to try to fashion a power cable
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I could see from the place where you plug in the power cord that it looked very similar to the
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power cords like the charging cords for an old electric razor and so I dug around in my spare
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parts bin and found a spare power cord for an old electric razor that's long since died
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and it didn't fit in the hole but I got out my sander and a little hacksaw and I sanded and
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sawed until I finally got the thing to fit and when I plugged it in there it powered the machine so
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now I have a power cord for it it looks a little funny because it's not a usual power cord but
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it works just fine so that was good let's see what else I cleaned the contact points for place the
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belts I made a power cord I discovered that the fast forward was not working because the fast
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forward idler wheel did not turn it was frozen so I managed to get that off clean it out lubed it
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put it back in place where it spun freely and then of course fast forward worked perfectly from
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then on the record mechanism was having trouble like you pushed the little red record lever to the
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left and it's supposed to stay there when you you push that to the left and then push the
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control knob to the play position at the same time and it's supposed to lock in and start recording
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well it wouldn't do that and I took off the back cover and found that the record linkage was loose
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the the screw needed to be turned down about two or three turns and once I did that the record
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linkage worked just fine it still doesn't really record I mean it records something because when
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I start recording then I start missing with the record level it will actually record the sound
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of the static that the thing makes but it won't record any sound from the auxiliary audio input or
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from the microphone so I don't really know what's up with that okay so what I'm going to do now
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is play a tape on it I'm not going to play one that's got my brother's jazz thing because I know
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Ken doesn't want me to play any copyrighted music so what I'm going to do is let you hear it
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rewinding to get that tape off of there you can probably hear that little wheels are spinning
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nice and fast the tape counter is going there's one part missing there there's supposed to be a little
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cover over the tape head this one doesn't have an auto shut off the way the big one does over there
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on my stereo rack there's supposed to be a little cover over the record and playback heads but it's
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missing so I have no idea where that thing is not that big of a deal all right I'll put my
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put this tape away my brother's jazz tapes that goes away and now I'm going to let you hear what
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what I recorded earlier so I when I was at the office still I was talking about creating a CD that
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had the entire well-tempered clavier and goldberg variations at four times their regular speed
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and I accomplished that I made the CD and I've recorded the CD to a five-inch reel of tape at
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the speed of 19 centimeters per second and that would translate to seven and a half inches per
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second and the other speed that that tape deck over there on the stereo rack is capable of
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is three and three quarter inches or nine point five centimeters per second now the portable
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real to real tape deck will also play at an ultra low speed of four point eight centimeters per second
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or one and seven eight inches per second so again my goal was to record the music at the highest speed
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on my pioneer RT707 at 19 centimeters per second tape speed and record the music onto it at four
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times its regular speed and then when I play it back on the Sony TC222 at one and seven eight inches
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per second I think it's going to sound at the right speed now there might be a little bit of a
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discrepancy in the pitch as far as like what the exact original was but I think it ought to be
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pretty much dead on okay so right now I've queued it up to the fugue in C minor that says I think
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it's fugue number two from the well tempered clavier and I'll let you hear what that sounds like
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at four times speed playing on the RT707 at 19 centimeters per second exactly as I recorded it from
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the CD here we go
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now I can slow that down to half speed which would actually be two times the original speed
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and it's actually recognizable at that speed but clearly too fast
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okay so you get the idea that is at 9.5 centimeters or
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what three and three quarters inches per second okay now I'm going to rewind this tape and get it
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off of the tape deck and then I'm going to put it onto the Sony and play it back at the slow
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its speed and see if I was right about this okay that tape is rewound now I should say that this
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is old new stock tape that I bought this this tape is a gold crest double length tape so it's
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extra thin and I think it's kind of cheap quality it was not it seemed like it was sticking and
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that could be a function of it just being really old but it could also be that it's cheap
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and so I'm not confident this is going to sound very good and it'll probably have some
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mess-ups in it you might hear in the background my daughter singing I think she just got home and
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she's I can hear her down there playing the piano and singing her favorite songs
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sorry if that violets any copyright Ken but I have not a whole lot I can do about it
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this house the sound carries very well okay I'm getting the take-up reel threaded here
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it's a little bit tricky on this one
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this tape is a little bit sticky
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uh oh it on it came undone okay let me try again
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I've gotten a little bit better at this than I was when I did the the previous episode but still
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this one when the tape is a little bit sticky it's hard to get it done just right
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let's hold that firmly in place
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dang come on you
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okay I think I got it now all right so I'm going to switch the tape speed over to 178
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per second and press play let's see how it goes here
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just kind of a low hum I think that's from when I was trying to record on this tape earlier
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see when we'll get some music here
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all right can I get in here oops there was some failed attempts to get voice recording on here
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you know I'm gonna fast forward a little bit to get past this stuff I was trying to use a microphone
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I actually ordered a suitable microphone you know the microphone that came with the thing
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on eBay for like $15 and it's got a little it's got a 2-prong plug one prong is for the remote
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control and the others for the audio I guess and the remote works you when you push it to the
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record setting and the microphone is plugged in it won't actually start recording until you
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little you flip the little switch and then the wheels start rolling it's actually kind of cool
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so the remote control part worked but the audio did not work let's let's try this now
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okay
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the speed is definitely right it sounds awful but I'm going to fast forward a little bit more
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try to find a better spot here
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okay this is the one we were just listening to
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okay
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okay well this is a mixed success the the tape speed is roughly correct it's definitely not
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dead on accurate but it's roughly correct so recording music that is being played at 4 times
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the regular speed on a tape at 19 centimeters per second then putting that tape on the other
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machine and playing it back at 4.8 centimeters per second will basically make it go at the right
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speed I would like to try this later with a better quality tape I think this tape is a piece of
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junk and so what I might do is just unspool the entire thing so I can have the empty five inch
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reel and then put better tape on it I've got a I've got quite a lot of tapes here where I could
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just spool some of it off from a seven inch tape and put it onto this one and then try it again
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with a good tape and see if that makes any difference anyway I hope you guys have enjoyed hearing
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about me geeking out on these old analog tape formats it's been quite a lot of fun I really
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really love this new tape deck I wish it would record I'm going to keep working on that maybe
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there's some circuitry that's not going right or something I don't know but I'm really happy
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to have found a portable reel to reel tape deck and and gotten it into mostly working condition
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it's super fun I'm not sure it's all that useful but it's really fun to do so anyway that's
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probably enough for now I will talk to you guys some other time maybe about my other recent
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acquisitions like an 8-track tape player and a mini disk component for my stereo at work all right bye
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org we are a community
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podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our
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shows was contributed by an hbr listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is hecka public radio was found
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomicum computer club and it's part of the binary revolution
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at binwreff.com if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself unless otherwise stated today's show is
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released on the creative comments attribution share a light 3.0 license
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