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By tapedeck Tue Jun 04, 2013 5:08 pm
mmeebly wrote:@ Tapedeck

what if i were to buy something like this?

http://losangeles.craigslist.org/lac/el ... 18714.html

could i just buy 1/4 to RCA cables & record straight to tape from this?
what about editing tracks on tape?

yes, you could record mpc main outs to tape in on that.
however, i think you could still find something cheaper, like $20-50. but that is a nice looking system in good shape.

given your budget and caveman style i would forget editing and instead work on getting your chops on the mpc up.
then just commit to tape and take it as it is. people do still do this :mrgreen:
By MaZe Tue Jun 04, 2013 8:08 pm
Now that, that's gully. Might as well get one of these and keep it all the way thorough.

Image
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By crossings Tue Jun 04, 2013 8:57 pm
if you just wanna bounce to tape, you may as well use a VHS [to record strictly audio] instead at the high speed setting... it uses much thicker tape. :nod: :mrgreen:
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By Metatron72 Tue Jun 04, 2013 9:14 pm
crossings wrote:if you just wanna bounce to tape, you may as well use a VHS [to record strictly audio] instead at the high speed setting... it uses much thicker tape. :nod: :mrgreen:


:lol:

I remember digital recorders in the 80's that worked with hifi VHS at faster tape speeds, and betamax as the extra magnetic drums beta had made for even better recordings.
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By Ill-Green Wed Jun 05, 2013 12:10 pm
I don't use a computer in my set-up. You don't have to but some do. I don't.

I use the Tascam DP-01 and its been with me since 2003 and still got plenty of recording space on its 40GB harddrive. Not making a recommendation on a model, but I would recommend going digital than tape, due to maintanence of the tape machine and finding tape to record with. With digital you can transfer over to a computer easily in a digital-to-digital enviroment either by USB or hot swapping SD or CF cards into a PC, instead of digital-to-analog-to-digital conversion.

Many options available to you. Choose.
By Clint Wed Jun 05, 2013 11:45 pm
A cheap four track, maybe? If tape is an option. Or a cheap Akai DPS12, had one its actually quite nifty.
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By Coz Thu Jun 06, 2013 12:15 am
mmeebly wrote:(very minimal)



No shit! :lol:

The only thing nobody has mentioned (yes, I'm looking for a fresh angle here :mrgreen: ) is a standalone CD burner. You could track out onto CD and import it into your newly fixed PC and edit everything back together with a cheap DAW like Reaper. I used to do it all the time before I got my audio PC.