On the plus side, AFAIK the tapes are pretty much full tape width tones that have no bearing on tracks,etc., so the high speed stereo deck *may* be able to use the same tape as a 4 or 8 track machine (not 100% certain if any other value conversion or anything would be necessary though). I think the main "multi frequency" tape for playback response and stuff was the one I could never find. The vocals are what make the song, and you can always hide any unwanted instrument noise behind distortion or another track. There's actually specific tapes for different calibration routines, but you can make do with the normal speed one for some of it. User review from Oliviercool about Tascam Portastudio 424: User review from Oliviercool about Tascam Portastudio 424. I bought a torque tape a while back and when it hit the stop point it just freewheeled as the tape inside simply fell of the reel (dried up adhesive or something). Mine are all over 20 years old now, so I'm not even sure how much I can trust those, though I've been as careful as possible on their storage. Its high audio quality and creative flexibility reflect the experience and innovation that have allowed TASCAM to earn its reputation in. Unfortunately, you definitely can't record an accurate one yourself, and the whole thing is a can of worms which is probably best left unopened. The PORTASTUDIO 424 MKIII is a 4-track 'Multitrack Master' cassette tape recorder and a full-function mixer with 8 inputs/stereo outputs combined into a single workstation.
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