The death of cassettes

NeilGabriel
NeilGabriel Posts: 1,487
edited May 2007 in 2 Channel Audio
"The days of the humble cassette tape will soon be coming to a timely end with the announcement from British electrical retailer Currys that their existing stocks of blank cassettes will be sold but not replenished.

The retailer has also predicted that cassette decks will also disappear from the range in the next 18 months."

I assume that this audio format will not survive the way that vinyl has. I have to admit that I liked casseettes a lot and at one time, had put my entire record collection on tape....and now I don't even have a player connected. Thankfully, many of the albums ultimately appeared on CDs. RIP?
Anyone still relying on cassettes or maybe even reel to reel? I miss the old Pioneer RT-707 I once had.
Post edited by NeilGabriel on

Comments

  • WilliamM2
    WilliamM2 Posts: 4,782
    edited May 2007
    Cassettes died for me in 1984 or so. I have not missed them one bit.
  • dorokusai
    dorokusai Posts: 25,577
    edited May 2007
    Yea, no kidding....how's this a revelation :)
    CTC BBQ Amplifier, Sonic Frontiers Line3 Pre-Amplifier and Wadia 581 SACD player. Speakers? Always changing but for now, Mission Argonauts I picked up for $50 bucks, mint.
  • NeilGabriel
    NeilGabriel Posts: 1,487
    edited May 2007
    I think revelation was in the Bible....more of an observation. I think there are obvious reasons that some people stay with vinyl but there seems to be no remorse for cassettes/tape. Still, I noticed that the rtr that I sold 14 yrs ago for $75 is now selling for over $200 on ebay. I was just curious if anyone still used tape to any degree (maybe this is for the 50+ crowd).
  • MSALLA
    MSALLA Posts: 1,602
    edited May 2007
    I never liked cassette sq compared to Lp.
    Michael


    Samsung 50" HD DLP
    Yamaha RX-V2500
    (2) Outlaw 200
    Adcom GFA 555
    Sony BDP300
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    12.1 SVS driver in 4.53 cuft. tube
    Harmony 880
  • dorokusai
    dorokusai Posts: 25,577
    edited May 2007
    A revelation is simply a word to me, what's the Bible?

    I picked up a couple very nice cassette decks ages ago(Nakamichi RX-505/Pioneer CT1250) and figured it would be cool to get into taping again...new silicon rollers, belts, tweaked & spec'd, blah blah....nope.

    It was only fun to know how to service them but the manufactured audio results were just not for me.
    CTC BBQ Amplifier, Sonic Frontiers Line3 Pre-Amplifier and Wadia 581 SACD player. Speakers? Always changing but for now, Mission Argonauts I picked up for $50 bucks, mint.
  • sucks2beme
    sucks2beme Posts: 5,612
    edited May 2007
    dorokusai wrote: »
    A revelation is simply a word to me, what's the Bible?

    I picked up a couple very nice cassette decks ages ago(Nakamichi RX-505/Pioneer CT1250) and figured it would be cool to get into taping again...new silicon rollers, belts, tweaked & spec'd, blah blah....nope.

    It was only fun to know how to service them but the manufactured audio results were just not for me.


    They were only good for moving music over to the car.
    8-track is dead too. So's DAT. Ride the light, baby!!!
    "The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." --Thomas Jefferson
  • madmax
    madmax Posts: 12,434
    edited May 2007
    I rebuilt a pioneer deck last year and bought a bunch of blank cassettes so I'm good to go for awhile! Really don't use them other than as an oddity.
    madmax
    Vinyl, the final frontier...

    Avantgarde horns, 300b tubes, thats the kinda crap I want... :D
  • zombie boy 2000
    zombie boy 2000 Posts: 6,641
    edited May 2007
    What I really think is worth lamenting is the death of the "mix tape". Nearly half the bands I listen to were given to me by a friend in the form of a mix tape. Many, many times I re-recorded select tracks and passed them on. I suppose tape trading is going the way of the dodo.
    I never had it like this where I grew up. But I send my kids here because the fact is you go to one of the best schools in the country: Rushmore. Now, for some of you it doesn't matter. You were born rich and you're going to stay rich. But here's my advice to the rest of you: Take dead aim on the rich boys. Get them in the crosshairs and take them down. Just remember, they can buy anything but they can't buy backbone. Don't let them forget it. Thank you.Herman Blume - Rushmore
  • bobman1235
    bobman1235 Posts: 10,822
    edited May 2007
    You can still make a mix CD, and it's a hell of a lot easier tahn trying to patch together mix tapes used to be.

    I'd be amazed if "Currys" actually sells off their current stock. I don't know ANYONE who still uses cassettes on a regular basis - even my luddite father is completely converted to CDs.
    If you will it, dude, it is no dream.
  • zombie boy 2000
    zombie boy 2000 Posts: 6,641
    edited May 2007
    Yeah... but people tend to skip tracks on a Mix CD. There's an art to making a mix tape. The way one song blends into another. The sum being greater than the whole of its parts.
    Besides... making a mix tape shouldn't be easy.
    I never had it like this where I grew up. But I send my kids here because the fact is you go to one of the best schools in the country: Rushmore. Now, for some of you it doesn't matter. You were born rich and you're going to stay rich. But here's my advice to the rest of you: Take dead aim on the rich boys. Get them in the crosshairs and take them down. Just remember, they can buy anything but they can't buy backbone. Don't let them forget it. Thank you.Herman Blume - Rushmore
  • reeltrouble1
    reeltrouble1 Posts: 9,312
    edited May 2007
    Reel to Reel still has a following.

    RT1
  • steveinaz
    steveinaz Posts: 19,538
    edited May 2007
    The last cassette deck I owned, it was awesome:
    Source: Bluesound Node 2i - Preamp/DAC: Benchmark DAC2 DX - Amp: Parasound Halo A21 - Speakers: MartinLogan Motion 60XTi - Shop Rig: Yamaha A-S501 Integrated - Shop Spkrs: Elac Debut 2.0 B5.2
  • heiney9
    heiney9 Posts: 25,220
    edited May 2007
    The last cassette deck I owned was a Nakamichi Dragon. That was in 1988-92. I used to tape my LP's the very first time I played them and then put them away and listen to cassettes.

    The Dragon was a phenominal machine that even today it's hard to distinguish a metal bias tape from a cd if recorded properly. The only thing the Dragon would be good for today is as a museum piece to look at. Tape died a long time ago and even though I would be tickled pink to have a Dragon again I'd never use it, but I couild stare at it for hours :p

    H9
    "Appreciation of audio is a completely subjective human experience. Measurements can provide a measure of insight, but are no substitute for human judgment. Why are we looking to reduce a subjective experience to objective criteria anyway? The subtleties of music and audio reproduction are for those who appreciate it. Differentiation by numbers is for those who do not".--Nelson Pass Pass Labs XA25 | EE Avant Pre | EE Mini Max Supreme DAC | MIT Shotgun S1 | Pangea AC14SE MKII | Legend L600 | BlueSound Node 3 - Tubes add soul!
  • steveinaz
    steveinaz Posts: 19,538
    edited May 2007
    H9
    If you look on the right panel of the Teac Z, you'll see a bunch of pots. These were for optimizing the player with specific tapes; ie, Maxell, TDK, BASF, / Metal, FE, standard etc. You actually set bias/level using the pots and the meters for best reproduction.

    The Dragon was an awesome machine.
    Source: Bluesound Node 2i - Preamp/DAC: Benchmark DAC2 DX - Amp: Parasound Halo A21 - Speakers: MartinLogan Motion 60XTi - Shop Rig: Yamaha A-S501 Integrated - Shop Spkrs: Elac Debut 2.0 B5.2
  • heiney9
    heiney9 Posts: 25,220
    edited May 2007
    steveinaz wrote: »
    H9
    If you look on the right panel of the Teac Z, you'll see a bunch of pots. These were for optimizing the player with specific tapes; ie, Maxell, TDK, BASF, / Metal, FE, standard etc. You actually set bias/level using the pots and the meters for best reproduction.

    The Dragon was an awesome machine.

    Yep the Dragon had 3 specific test tone sweeps for R & L level & bias calibration for all 3 types of tapes. The best thing about the Dragon was the automatic azimuth alignment. The head was motorized and no matter what tape from any other machine you put in their it would test and align the head to play each and every tape to it's optimum.

    The only downside was because of the precise alignment of Nak heads the tapes made on them didn't always sound their best on other machines because of azimuth alignment issues. Nak never used a "sandwich" type head and thier gaps were extremely precise. In fact the whole mechanism was extremely precise. Nak made tapes always sounded the best on Nak machines, but all tapes sounded their best on the Dragon due the azimuth alignment.

    The CR7A deck below the Dragon had a manual azimuth alignment adjustment. That was no slouch either. It had a real time counter where the Dragon never did.

    H9
    "Appreciation of audio is a completely subjective human experience. Measurements can provide a measure of insight, but are no substitute for human judgment. Why are we looking to reduce a subjective experience to objective criteria anyway? The subtleties of music and audio reproduction are for those who appreciate it. Differentiation by numbers is for those who do not".--Nelson Pass Pass Labs XA25 | EE Avant Pre | EE Mini Max Supreme DAC | MIT Shotgun S1 | Pangea AC14SE MKII | Legend L600 | BlueSound Node 3 - Tubes add soul!