Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
The bigger problem is that you may eventually want to listen to the
first three things you recorded on that piece of tape. But in general, it doesn't matter how many times a tape has been recorded on. It matters how many hundreds of times it's passed through the tape path on a tape deck, and how well aligned that path was, and how many times it's been fast-wound, etc. You could mix down to the same piece of 1/4" tape many times. You could track to 2" tape and dump it to ProTools many times. But if you track to 2", do a few hundred punch-ins, and then spend 4 months mixing it, the tape will have been wound and unwound thousands of times and it'll start to sound tattered because it IS tattered. ulysses In article , ScotFraser wrote: Can I use old tapes that have been recorded from 1 to 3 times ? Any problems I should be aware of ? The possible problem is not that it has been run over the heads 1 to 3 times but the fact that it's old. You may run into shedding problems. If the tape isn't really old, there's nothing wrong with re-recording on well stored erased tape that hasn't been played to death with month after month of overdub sessions. Scott Fraser |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
There sure are a lot of "newbie" analog tape questions lately | Pro Audio | |||
Analog tape how many uses ? | Pro Audio | |||
Do I really want an analog tape deck? | Pro Audio | |||
Digidesign to release new HD Plugin - REAL OXIDE | Pro Audio | |||
FS - Tascam ATR-60 16 track analog tape machine | Pro Audio |