My 80’s professional Walkman still works. Records and everything. My Fisher Mini HiFi still plays my 70’s & 80’s tapes. Though many tapes are snapping now
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Going through a few old boxes and found a few tapes from the 80s plus a Walkman.
New batteries in and it all plays perfectly.
It has some live recordings that I'd like to save on my phone so I can share on What's App.
I could just play the Walkman through a Bluetooth speaker and let my phone record but wondered if there's a better way?
I don't have a separate cassette deck any more nor any kind of recording device other than my phone. Happy to invest a modest sum.
No Nakamichi Dragon recommendations ideally...
TIA
My 80’s professional Walkman still works. Records and everything. My Fisher Mini HiFi still plays my 70’s & 80’s tapes. Though many tapes are snapping now
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You have a computer I assume? If so, you can use that with Audacity software and you can borrow my Creative labs device if you like. I used it a lot to transfer mini disc recordings to pc to convert to mp3.
^Superb piece of kit, Mick.
If it's the one I'm thinking of weren't they about £300 in the 80s?
A ''cassette to digital'' converter is your answer, ebay maybe your friend though it's possible that a WTB might work.
"Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time it's enemy action."
'Populism, the last refuge of a Tory scoundrel'.
This guy will do both sides for £8.50 a tape:
https://www.mr-scan.co.uk/index.html
I'm sure there are other places on line.
A few options I think.
Free is connecting your Walkman to the audio input on your mac/pc though these days they are generally just mic inputs and you may need to play around with Walkman volume (start low) and mic input levels (start low) and juggle them till a reasonable outcome. Though I suspect this would give a mono recording.
This Mac guide might give some pointers https://www.switchingtomac.com/tutor...nput-on-a-mac/
Or spend £20 on a usb phono input and use the Walkman as the source still
https://www.behringer.com/behringer/...odelCode=P0484
Or do this but buy a reconditioned tape deck convert the tapes and sell it on.
Or on amazon there are some “Walkman” that record directly to a usb stick for about £25 some good reviews some poor but could be worth a shot and return if poor?
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cassette-Co.../dp/B076PFJKRJ
Last edited by Captain Morgan; 13th July 2021 at 10:09.
I found this in a drawer a few weeks ago, was my pride and joy in the 80’s - curious to know where these can be serviced as mine makes a horrible shrieking when trying to rewind! I think I had the recording version at the same time, might have a dig around - worked in Tottenham Court Road hi-fi shops as a Saturday lad in my youth and they offered healthy discounts
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Loved my Walkman too which has unfortunately long gone but still have the tapes, it was this model WM-22, would love another for old times sake..
Haha I know what you mean! I think there was a ‘ budu Khan’ version with fancy Japanese characters splashed across the front (as referenced in a massive attack song of the time). I do remember Dolby c took away most of the hiss but also the treble so stuck with the bog standard Dolby b. The controls have a great feel to them, in fact the whole thing feels more engineered than made, the whole case is metal and everything feels like new even though it had lots of use. Used to attach the line out to a pair of wharfedale active speakers for a bit of Duran Duran!
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Beautifully engineered.
Dolby C was a rarity, even on separates in the early 80s IIRC. It did flatten the sound though.
I remember recording one of the first CDs that came out (Dire Straits?) on to a That's metal tape and the quality wasn't that much different from my reasonably high level Technics CD player.
It was streets ahead of the standard Maxell tapes I'd been using. I'm sure it would have sounded even better on your DC2.