Tapes were all I had at a young age. Started with a Pye CR-9 Shoebox recorder, and 2 Pre-Records, T-Rex greatest hits and Joan Jett.
Moved up to a Pye Ghetto Blaster shortly after, but didn't do any recording.
Started recording in 1990 with a Teac 4 in 1 system, fixed magnet erase head and no chrome capability. That thing was shocking but it was all I knew at the time.
Did have a Clarion double cassette deck, good build quality and better recording than the teac. I ended up selling it. Turned out to be a very rare deck.
Quality got much better when I bought a beaten up Yamaha K-600 deck, made tapes that sounded great in the Sony Walkmans.
First HX-Pro Deck, a Yamaha KX-530. Had plenty of other yamahas in between, all single capstan.
First 3 head dual capstan deck, a JVC TD-V661, that unit was and still is an awesome deck, capstan belt was replaced and that's it. If I want HX-PRO this is the deck I use.
Then Hit Nakamichi territory and never looked back. 480, BX-1's, BX-2's (these are now parts units). RX-303 that I just couldn't get right.
The Naks which were successfully restored and are in the main cabinet: 670ZX and 3x BX-300's. Plus a DR-3 used for playback only, put a head from a BX-2 in it to replace the original one that was worn out.
Don't feel the need to go any higher with Naks, the crystalloy heads in the BX-300s are brilliant, they record/play everything nicely. Naks go for a long time when restored and serviced.
I did go through a digital phase though, CDs, Discmans, Mp3s which were great for the convenience and mass collecting of albums, but ended up returning to vinyl and cassette for the analog sound quality. I do enjoy high resolution digital from time to time, as long as its lossless flac format, mp3s are used as a last resort. Streaming is used purely for convenience in the work vehicle. Modern cars don't even have cd players anymore, and bluetooth sucks.