catchall analog SAFE SPACE thread (tech room)

11
Justin Foley wrote:Does there need to be one thread? A lot of questions have been asked and discussed in past threads - seems a little silly to not take advantage of the existing wealth of information already here.i.e.NAB vs IEC thread.= Justini feel you justin. my intention was more of a discussion than straight tech questions, but also if there are tech questions that have been asked before it groups the kerbles together. i guess honing your goddamnfuckingholyhellofashit search function skills might be a more systemic fix, but, well here we are.
------
www.thehomerecordingproject.com

catchall analog SAFE SPACE thread (tech room)

12
I've used a few machines with relapped heads done by JRF, all of which were great. I have yet to hear a bad word about their services. Is there even another option, anyway?As for tape formulations, for rock stuff I prefer RMG 911, but the last couple reels I've used have had some issues with QC (shitty slitting tolerances, mainly, causing edge track inconsistencies). I haven't bought any since it became RTM, so maybe that stuff is all fixed now. For sure, the reels that were branded Pyral SUCKED and I would stay away from those.I find 900 to be a bit soft and tubby for my tastes, some people really like the gluey thing it does. Always feels kind of swampy to me, for want of a better word. I like the midrange focus of 911.Don't have much experience with ATR tape, but many people I respect like it. The A827 we have doesn't like ATR (weird artifacts, almost like digital clocking clicks). I believe that's a known issue, but I'm not sure what the cause is or whether there has been a fix.If I was buying tape today, I would probably grab a reel of the RTM 911 to see how the QC is, and also a reel of ATR to compare it to. It's all so subjective and machine-specific. When you start getting up to +9 levels, the front end of the tape machine itself can start to give up. Whether that's a positive or negative is totally up to you.

catchall analog SAFE SPACE thread (tech room)

14
Revox are consumer Studers. Some Studers (like the B67, which I have) are similar to some Revox machines, like the B77. The B77 you linked is a 2 track deck.Other tape machines in your budget are Otari MX50 and MX5050. You might even be able to find a higher grade Otari (MTR 10 or 12) for under $1500. Ampex 440 was (and probably still is) a workhorse that is supposedly easy enough to maintain/has plenty for parts, and I'm confident you can find one for less than $1500. I found my Studer B67 for $125 and with the work I've put into it and still have to put into it it'll come up to $1500. So you might want to look at those. I would say look for a machine that can run at 30IPS if you can, but that might not be in your budget.

catchall analog SAFE SPACE thread (tech room)

18
Revox mostly made 2-track machines, some of which were indeed more of a consumer, hi-fi standard (B77s) and some a little more high-tech. I own a PR99 mkIII and it's an awesome machine, 15ips, very stable, transparent, all balanced ins and outs. I use it all the time for mixdown.There are also some pretty rare multi-tracks, c274 and c278 - I read mixed things about them online, but I can't see how they can be bad, given the quality of all the other Revox stuff.

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests