I've wanted to do a cassette deck hack for a while, so when a friend threw out his 80's ghetto blaster just before BurningDork 2007 it seemed too good an opportunity to miss.
|
|
First
mod was to setup one deck to allow scratching. To do this I originally
removed the pinch roller so that the tape could run free. Later on I
realised I could modify the pause button to retract the pinch roller
without actually pausing the player.
One thing that isn't obvious (and is hard to explain) is that the
scratch wheel should be on the spool that is unwinding - not the one
that the tape is winding on to. Just take my word for this.
The photo shows an early version with just the scratch mod. In the final machine I added a pitch control for this deck as well.
Here is a short sample of the scratch mode from a jam session at BurningDork. A little of this goes a long way!
|
|
The
second mod was to make a tape delay out of the two decks. The key point
here was making a double cassette which allows one tape to be looped
through both mechanisms. I then reversed the decks so that the machine
recorded one one deck and then played back on the other a moment later.
|
|
The original
version just used audio feedback via the built in microphone to create
a tape reverb effect. Later I modified this to use an electronic
feedback that mixed the input and playback signals. |
|
Finally I added pitch controls and level controls for the mixers. Do you like the arty photo with the plaster arm?
The net effect is quite interesting. The low quality of the tape adds lots of noise for the "almost dead walkman" sound.
Here is a sample of the kind of impact you can have with the tape delay. |
|
The
hack went down a storm at BurningDork. One funny thing was that two
other people bought classic tape delay systems with them. Here is the
tape hack alongside a Watkins Copyicat and a Roland Space Echo. |
|
Have your say
Leave a comment in the guestbook.
Send Iain a private message. |
|