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Re: [ARSCLIST] On the beaten 8-track...



Interestingly, a few Dolby 8-track machines were made... One check on
the net and ebay found lots of examples... 

-----Original Message-----
From: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List
[mailto:ARSCLIST@xxxxxxx] On Behalf Of David Breneman
Sent: Monday, September 25, 2006 3:46 PM
To: ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] On the beaten 8-track...

--- Rob Bamberger <rbamberger@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Is my recollection mostly correct that there were few, or essentially 
> no consumer market 8-track decks that permitted people to record their

> own 8-track compilations for use in the car (or elsewhere)?

There were few, but that's alot different than "essentially no[ne]."  I
never saw a very high quality one.  They were usually a feature of
tabletop stereos of the type that had a tuner/amp/8-track machine with a
turntable on top.  An aunt and uncle of mine had one.  I don't think
they ever used it.  Radios Hack made a component 8-track recorder, which
was probably about the best you could buy.  They were around, but nobody
used them because they were a PITA.
Imagine a cart machine with no cue tone.

> Similarly, is it correct to surmise that the ability (eventually) to 
> make reasonably decent recordings of one's own LPs to cassette, or 
> custom compilations, was the major reason for the format's 
> disappearance in the early 1970s?

Early 70s?  Try early 80s.  Up until the advent of Dolby and chromium
dioxide tape the sound quality of cassettes was terrible.  The first
time I ever saw a cassette deck in a car was in 1976, in Germany.
8-tracks never caught on in Europe.  I didn't start to see them in the
US until a couple years later.  I'm trying to remember when I bought my
first cassette deck for my home stereo -- maybe around 1978?

> (The 8-track format had a number of things going against it, and would

> have passed from the scene at some point. The question here is why did

> it disappear when it did.)

1) Cassette sound quality eventually overtook 8-tracks with the
   advent of Dolby and chrome tape.

2) Ease of making your own compilations.

3) No annoying split-song track changes.


David Breneman         david_breneman@xxxxxxxxx

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