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Another type of cassette adapter is the Bluetooth cassette adapter. It has the shape of a standard cassette, but has a built-in audio Bluetooth receiver module, a simple power supply to allow charging and power and a small battery. Usually, they may power on when the cassette player is set on play, and power off when the cassette player is stopped.
Threaded tape of an open Compact Cassette in the tape drive. The capstan is a rotating spindle used to move recording tape through the mechanism of a tape recorder.The tape is threaded between the capstan and one or more rubber-covered wheels, called pinch rollers, which press against the capstan, thus providing friction necessary for the capstan to pull the tape.
A high-quality recording on cassette could rival the sound of an average commercial CD, though the quality of pre-recorded cassettes has been regarded by the general public as lower than could be achieved in a quality home recording. [16] There was a call for better sound quality in 1981, surprisingly by the head of Tower Records, Russ Solomon.
One of these is the impedance of the coil - playback preferring a high impedance, and recording a low one. In the very best tape recorders, separate heads are used to avoid compromising these desirable characteristics. Having separate heads for recording and playback has other advantages, such as off-tape monitoring during recording, etc.
AM/FM stereo radio, so-dbb bass, Dobly B noise reduction, auto-reverse, cassette recorder WM-B52 1988 WM-503 1989 WM-AF54 1989 AM stereo/FM stereo radio, Sports WM-3000 1990 WM-3060 1990 WM-106 1990 WM-B603 1991 WM-GX320 1998 FM stereo, Mega bass, tape speed control, auto-reverse, continuous loop WM-GX400 2001
Record players, Audio receivers, Cassette decks, Ham radios, Speakers, Headphones Realistic was a private label consumer electronics brand produced by RadioShack . Initially only a home audio equipment brand, its product line expanded to include CB radios , walkie-talkies , and video camcorders by the 1980s.
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The original standard MC60 microcassette contained 43.2 m (142 ft) of tape for 30 minutes recording per side at 2.4 cm/s (about 15 ⁄ 16 ips, making it half the standard speed of a compact cassette). Most recorders also provide a slower speed of 1.2 cm/s, doubling the recording time but with poor sound quality.