Reel to Reel Options


Have always loved the sound of reel to reel recordings and am looking to jump back into the fray. I am interested in hearing the best options for great sound quality and reliability for used units. I have looked at AKAI (GX635 - GX 747), Revox B77, Otari MX5050, and Pioneer 909. Comments and/or recommendations?

zygat

Anything you buy will need to be refurbished completely,  if it was not already done.  The belts dry out, pinch rollers turn to goo, leaky caps, head realignment, etc. 

I was going to dive into R2R a couple years ago and after doing some research I backed away. Like others have said there are lots out there and in different formats and speeds. For audiophile quality you want the highest speeds, 10’ reals because of the speeds, good heads that are easy to align. An R2R that has been restored (not cheep) and your own music already on R2R. New music on R2R’s is very expensive, low quantities and low selection.

From my personal recommendation, if you do not already have a collection of music on reals don’t bother.  Not worth the price of entry unless your wealthy and can afford to buy a top machine, have it restored and buy the $500 per real prerecorded music.

 Just go google blank R2R reals for sale that should give you a good idea what R2R’s cost of running is. For the benefits over quality vinyl IMO not worth it unless your wealthy enough to afford the cost of entry, etc.

there are basically two worlds based on speeds and pre-recorded content.

prosumer quality 7-1/2 IPS 7" diameter pre-recorded 4 track tapes, I went that way, have a few Teac X2000 auto-reverse 6 head decks and had about 500, sold some, now maybe 300 pre-recorded tapes. they can sound terrific, highest measured distortion, yet my best sounding content. Least convenience. Only content from their era is available. larger tapes exist, but not like the next category.

They were not designed for service, take the fake wood case off, take the plastic case off, good luck getting your hands in there to clean/adjust/change a belt, 

studio quality 15 IPS, 2 track stereo, (some 30 IPS, some wider tape) buy studio quality machines, buy 2 track stereo tapes on 10" reels made today from masters ....  for sale for a lot more money, they can sound fabulous. They cost more and take up a lot more space, machines and tapes. Pro motors and brakes are needed to handle the extra weight of tape on 10" reels

My friend has two of these, they were designed for service, the deck simply lifts up on a hinge. I thought mine sounded great, but when he played me Led Zeppelin, holy crap, now I know what they were hearing in the studio when making the music! It was like night and day difference between any other version I have heard.

https://www.ebay.com/itm/256728400718?mkevt=1&mkcid=1&mkrid=711-53200-19255-0&campid=5338381866&toolid=10001&customid=4b2f61a0-97ea-11f0-b68f-363537336264

Commercial 7 1/2 IPS tapes are scarce and expensive. They average about $30 each. I have around 30. I have three decks: a TEAC, a Pioneer 707 and a vintage all-tube Sony. The Sony had been restored when I bought it.

 

The cassette killed the RTR deck - and almost killed the LP. Cassette tapes were cheap and easy to load/use. The Sony Walkman allowed on-the-go listening. With Dolby noise reduction sound quality was quite good! I have a Nakamichi B deck and an Alpine-era Luxman. Also I bought a Technics DCC deck and several DCC classical tapes. I was curious about the sound quality of this new lossy format.