DIY Tape Looper

Started by mattthegamer463, April 27, 2012, 11:11:51 PM

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mattthegamer463

Hey guys,

Found a broken CD/Tape/radio combo and thought I could make a tape looper, so I carved it up and am working on an enclosure, then I'll build a circuit for motor control, amplifier, etc. and footswitch controls.

At present



I'll keep you guys updated, I'm sure someone will find this interesting.

mattthegamer463

Finished up the enclosure because this is my last week of machine shop access, time to start working on the electronics.


joelindsey

That certainly looks cool! I commend you for going ahead with a cassette loop/delay device. There's been a great deal of discussion about it but I've yet to see anybody build anything like it.

deadastronaut

excellent, can't wait to hear/see it in action.... :icon_cool:
https://www.youtube.com/user/100roberthenry
https://deadastronaut.wixsite.com/effects

chasm reverb/tremshifter/faze filter/abductor II delay/timestream reverb/dreamtime delay/skinwalker hi gain dist/black triangle OD/ nano drums/space patrol fuzz//

timd

I have been searching many sites recently for this exact kind of thing, but there isn't much info on how to construct them.

dirtysteev

Sweet. I tore apart an OLD tape deck the other day, down to it's bones, and what do I find? A cute little 9V motor attached to the drive, two wires for the playback head, two wires for the recording head. Simple. I think it is a prime candidate for turning into a looper/delay as well. I already rebuilt an amplifier for it, just need to work out the input controls and I think I want variable voltage on the drive itself for speed. Stay tuned.

garcho

I've wanted to build a cassette tape delay for years, exciting project.
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Colonel Angus

http://hackaday.com/2010/12/20/tape-delay-made-from-recycled-cassette-decks/

This is an awesome build, a tape delay DIY. Somewhat off-topic but related.
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mattthegamer463

Quote from: dirtysteev on May 01, 2012, 12:17:05 PM
Sweet. I tore apart an OLD tape deck the other day, down to it's bones, and what do I find? A cute little 9V motor attached to the drive, two wires for the playback head, two wires for the recording head. Simple. I think it is a prime candidate for turning into a looper/delay as well. I already rebuilt an amplifier for it, just need to work out the input controls and I think I want variable voltage on the drive itself for speed. Stay tuned.

Thats what I've got here, we should swap notes.  Does the deck still work or is it fully apart now?  I would be interested in seeing voltages into the heads when in play and record modes, to see if there is a DC bias (I think there is) and what the record amplitude is. 

Earthscum

Quote from: Colonel Angus on May 01, 2012, 01:54:07 PM
http://hackaday.com/2010/12/20/tape-delay-made-from-recycled-cassette-decks/

This is an awesome build, a tape delay DIY. Somewhat off-topic but related.

HA! That's awesome... I have one head, but it's single sided (not auto-reverse). I was going to hack apart a couple auto-reverse cassette decks, one for write and one for record (use the full width of the tape). I see new (probably considered "NOS" :lol: ) tapes at the flea markets, or new cheapy tapes at the dollar stores. I'd much rather just buy a couple of the heads, but my searches have revealed no source for tape heads.  :icon_cry:
Give a man Fuzz, and he'll jam for a day... teach a man how to make a Fuzz and he'll never jam again!

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ashcat_lt

^^^You know those cassette things you plug into your ipod for cars without an Aux input?  ;)

mattthegamer463

I've done some experimenting, and it looks like playing tapes back is way easier than recording them, but both can likely be done without too much trouble.  Investigating my tape deck, I found that when recording the head was receiving a 32V p-p 106kHz sine wave.  I had a 1kHz source hooked to the input and I wasn't seeing anything but pure wave so I'm not sure what was going on there but it could have been a channel mixup so I'll look into it further this weekend, and try to find more parameters to work with.

I was initially under the impression that the 2nd head in the unit is for recording, and the main one was playback but in fact that is an erase head, play/rec is all done on the center head.  This is disappointing since the device can't be used as a delay without heavy modification.   Looks like a looper will be the only function.

My homemade loop tape seems to be working so I'll hopefully be able to do some more tinkering soon.  My tape deck is malfunctioning and won't even record on unmodified tapes, so I need to find another one so I can make some sweep signal test tapes for developing and tuning the playback EQ.


mattthegamer463

Quote from: bassesofdeath on May 04, 2012, 10:19:50 PM
http://www.mysterycircuits.com/drumssette/drumssette.html

That is super cool, what a great way to do it.  You could even swap tapes for different samples, so genius.

joelindsey

Quote from: bassesofdeath on May 04, 2012, 10:19:50 PM
http://www.mysterycircuits.com/drumssette/drumssette.html

I love Mike Walters' work. Not only are his pieces polished and useful, they look great too. The Melloman cassette keyboard is amazing, my sister used it on her second EP. She had it at her house for a while so I had a chance to play it. Fun stuff!

mattthegamer463

After much poking around with a partly-broken cassette deck, I have learned it uses a 32V p-p sine wave at 106kHz as a carrier frequency when recording.  My circuitry plan is:

Recording circuit:

Sine generator-------
                              mixing amp stage -------- magnetic head
Buffered input-------

Playback:

magnetic head-------  amplifier -------- demodulator (low pass filter or possible cancellation circuit) -------- 5 band EQ ------ amplifier --------- output to amp

It'll be lots of work to figure out how the heck to do all this.  I have a feeling it will work, if it sounds good is another story.

joegagan

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Mike walters, my new hero.

Mattgamer, kudos for taking on such an ambitious project. Will be watching this thread for sure.

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