derek92994
Veteran and General Yakker
- Joined
- May 1, 2013
- Messages
- 7,410
- Location
- Australia
- Tagline
- Those who enter the man cave will get WOPLed
That is one of my most prized EC albums. First album I bought of Clapton.
Nando.
Derek: I bought a re-release of that album for my youngest son as a gift. And somewhere, I have my first box set I had ever bought, containing four chrome cassettes of Clapton's Crossroads with accompanying large booklet.
Nando.



Derek: A very nice box set of Led Zep in cassette. Looking at the colour of the tape it looks to be BASF stock. But, that's from what I know of NOS BASF I have used, lately. It could be Ampex.
Nando.
Not sure re the variant of the tape, didn't think ampex was that great so must be basf..
That's most unusual, considering Ampex (406/407 series, & including Grand Master) was the tape of choice with almost every recording studio in the world (and not only just the USA) throughout the 80's 90's and even to this day.
Does this apply to pre recorded cassette tapes? What did duplication plants use for tapes in the 1990's? I don't actually know what the tape variant is to be honest. The ampex I was referring to as bad was the very early ampex cassette tapes.
I don't know D2. It was an assumption that if they made decent reel to reel tape, that they would also make a fairly decent cassette. I'm pro'ly wrong.
I always stuck with TDK SA for all my cassettes 'cept for the occasional MA-R, but most 'gig' tapes were SA's.
As far as studio work, I used either the Ampex 406/7 or Grandmaster 456/7