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Gear / Technical Help => Ask The Tapers => Topic started by: jazz88 on January 28, 2010, 09:23:50 PM
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An old friend of mine gave me a ring and wanted to know if I wanted some of his old 4 track recordings (Early jam band and local stuff). In order for me to play those tapes do I need a 4 track player or can I use my analog deck?
Thanks
Patrick
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Four track reels? Cassettes?
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Unless they are truly four-channel recordings, they are more likely to be stereo "quarter-track" which simply means that the tapes could be recorded in stereo on both "sides" (fill the reel in one direction, turn it over and record again).
It works like this:
Left channel, side one
Right channel, side two
Right channel, side one
Left channel, side two
... so the left channel is always the top 1/4 of the tape and the right channel is always a little more than halfway down from there, regardless of which way the tape is running.
That's as distinguished from a half-track stereo tape, which can only be recorded in one direction or the other (if you fill it, then turn it over and record again, you've just "overwritten" your first recording).
Quarter-track stereo was a very common consumer tape format. Half-track was more professional (and had better signal-to-noise ratio among other advantages).
--best regards
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I never understood how that actually worked. Thanks for the insight and sorry for responding with nothing helpful.
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An old friend of mine gave me a ring and wanted to know if I wanted some of his old 4 track recordings (Early jam band and local stuff). In order for me to play those tapes do I need a 4 track player or can I use my analog deck?
Thanks
Patrick
iirc you will need a four track to play them back....shouldn't be too hard to find one on craigslist
edit-maybe you could play both sides back and then matrix them together in audacity. not sure how hard that would be to do, though
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Thanks for the help guys. I think I have a lead on a 4 track we''l see what he's got.
Patrick