steveidosound and ironbutt, great feedback, many thanks!!
I am learning a lot from you two. Another friend, also a neighbor, is very knowledgeable in tape/tape decks came over to give me a hand with the TEAC A3340S; yes, I can hear some of the music playing backwards when I switching cables in the back of the tape deck...there are a lot of combinations, front, rear, and then buttons in the front. Slowly I will understand it al.
Ok, next question/issue....turns out that several of the tapes my neighbor gave me (really belonged to his late father) were recorded in 3.5 (or 3 3/4, anyway the "3" speed). The TEAC A3340S I bought from my neighbor (originally owned by his father) a few days ago does not have the 3 speed; it has speeds of 7.5 (so called "slow" on the front of my machine) and 15 ips (fast speed)....It is curious that ~ half the tapes (about 10) I have tested so far were recorded at 3 (from handwritten notes in the tape box); thus because the TEAC A3340s does not have the 3 speed I can't play these tapes on that machine, but how did he record at 3 with the TEAC A3340s if its slowest speed on the TEAC is 7.5 ips? Possibly he was using another tape recorder, one with a 3 speed...is there any solution to this problem; can the TEAC A3340S be reconfigured to also run at 3? The reason is because I have many 10.5 tape recorded in the 3 speed.
Now not all is lost because I have an Akai reel to reel tape deck, 4 track (bought recently from the guy who was servicing our old SONY machine) that has speeds 3 and 7.5 ips....thus I can play his 7.5 inch reel tapes at 3 speed recorded tapes on the Akai.
But the more serious problem is the fact that I have lots of 10.5 tapes recorded at 3 ips...the 10.5 tapes obviously will not fit on the Akai machine. The only solution, not a good one, is to cut the 10.5 tapes into segments to fit on 7.5 inch reels. I really don't want to do this, but I did one yesterday as a trial. On the web I found that technics tape recorder use to make aa a recorder that covered all three speeds....but the one I found for sale...price too high for me, about 1200$
Yet here is another issue: there are a few tapes that have written notes in the box saying that the speed is 1 or 1.5 ...in the "1" range...is that possible?...are there tape recorders that recorded/played at this speed. Oh, I just solved that problem...I remembered that our old SONY TC252 (2 track) has three speeds: 1 7/8, 3 ?, and 7 ? and I just opened the case to discover it has these speeds...the SONY works great as I recently had it serviced. I was told by my friend who came over yesterday that no music should be recorded using the 1 7/8 speed, correct? Should only use this speed for recording talks/talking.
As you can see my "tape project" is a bit overwhelming...I am a novice, but I am going slow and steady however.
FYI the 10.5 reels that were given to me are with the following tape brands mainly; Irish and LR Audiotape and some other brands such as Scotch....on the notes with each 10.5 tape the dates are ~ 1960...this would make these tapes >50 y old. I don?t know how they were stored before I got them...currently I have them in our garage (no AC), but will moving into the house where there is AC.
I should also mention that I have not even started with the cassette tape collection, numbering in the several hundred tapes...I have several big boxes in the garage filled with cassette tapes that he (the deceased father) recorded.
And it does not end there; he recorded a lot of TV on vhs?and I have those tapes too. There is no priority on these recordings since the technology is more or less recent, and I have several vcrs in the house....along with computers, software for converting vhs to DVD...but of coudrse I need to be careful on this as most TV is copyright protected....thus I will probably not make any VHS>DVD conversions from TV...anyway I have a backlog of my own personal videoing VHS>DVD I must get too.
I think I see an evolution to the late father's music/tape interest...first, reel to reel...then cassette tapes...then cd...my neighbor kept the cd...presumably the person (who died) did electronic music, either created by him or copied from the radio or other sources. Some of the reel-to-reel contain electronic music...must have been early stuff since computers did not appear as a consumer/hobby item before about 1975...
Overall so far most of the material I obtained from the late father I have listened is classical music.
Thanks for your continued feedback, talyortapes....I think you have probably figured out that the late father's last name was Taylor, but you can keep referring to me as Taylor or taylortapes.