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Re: [ARSCLIST] Nakamichi BX 1 Tape Deck



Lots of good info can be found at http://www.naks.com/ a private Nakamichi
cassette deck "fan site."

They sponsor a mailing list with a fairly high noise-to-signal factor, but I
have my fiters set to mark all messages read except those that have the word
"Dragon" in them.

Steve Sank (he's near you, isn't he) lovingly restores Dragons, but I, too,
worry about parts for them.

Cheers,

Richard

--

Richard L. Hess
http://www.richardhess.com/tape/


Quoting Robert Hodge <rjhodge@xxxxxxx>:

> Dear Randy ,
>
> Remember, caveat emptor !!!
>
> Syracuse University ( not this department ) had a couple  of Nakamitchi
> cassette decks ( model unknown -  scrapped ) that were purchased around 1980
> or so , that when needing service, parts were found to be unavailable ..
> These were also semi professional ( unbalanced output - RCA plugged )
> machines .
> They weren't Dragons- I suspect parts are still available for those
> (Hopefully)
>
> Good Luck - I wish I could give you more info.
>
> Sincerely ,
>
> Bob Hodge
> Belfer Audio Archive
> Syracuse University
>
>
> >>> sirnailheadjr@xxxxxxxx 06/18/04 10:22PM >>>
> Hey...I found a Nakamichi BX-1 Cassette Deck in a resale shop the other day
> at the nice price of $25 and have been looking for an upgrade of my Fischer
> Double Deck before I pull out a huge box of old Cassettes of various live
> bands I recorded/played with years ago.  I'm looking to do digital transfers
> and know that some of the finest decks around are made by Nakamichi.
>
> The casing is black, but it has no manual or other documentation as to how
> old it is.  The deck looks to be in very good shape.  It's clean, very little
> wear or dirt from handling, almost no dings or scratches.  I looked into the
> cassette well and it was very clean, with almost none of the dust you would
> expect to flake out over the years.  The Play and Record heads looked clean
> with no gunk and very light wear.  The rubber rollers looked a bit faded or
> dry.  The RCA plugs also looked pretty nice with none of the wear you would
> find had the plugs been scraping from repeated removals.
>
> I can't do much more to check it out unless I buy it.  I'll put a tape in to
> see that it moves and hopefully be able to hook it to another stereo in the
> shop to see how it sounds.  Any advice on how well this model was built, when
> it was in production, how much I might have to expect in repair costs or
> other "Cheap & Dirty" diagnostic tricks I can use to see if the pitch is
> correct, etc.  Thanks.  Randy
>


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