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Sony
TC-880-2
Sony
TC-8750-2
(november 1974 - 1980)
The
other big one - the rich, very rich amateur's deck. Adorned with
cool frills like PPM meters, a notable example of elegance in design
AND the same build quality as any explicitly professional deck.
The TC-880-2 was (and still
is) a half-track recorder/player, could spin tape at 19 and 38cm/s,
had (and still has) four F&F heads, DD motors, Closed-Loop/Dual-Capstan,
a real-time counter (at 38cm/s), Uniphase trickery and 36kg on the
balance.
According
to my japanese tech report from 1978, frequency response of the
TC-880-2 skyrockets at 50kHz
with no attenuation at all.
Sold in Japan under the TC-8750-2
moniker for the royalty-like sum of 550,000¥.
For the sake of comparison, the big TC-756-2
cost 180,000¥ and the monster
TC-9000F
professional half-track only 260,000¥ !
Unlike other big Sonys, the TC-880-2
was only available as half-track - prestige oblige.
What
is oft forgotten about Sony is that its early successes came from
tape recorders : Sony's TapeCorders
(...TC) always sold well, were well
reviewed and found their way into many a studio, whether audio or...
video.
Sony
quickly became the undisputed leader in the video field - a position
still held today since the era of 2"
video. Sony's early digital audio decks (whether PCM
or integrated) became worldwide standards, just like the PCM-3324
and PCM-3348 became worldwide industry standard, just like DAT
became a professional
standard, just like the professional Betacam
became a worldwide standard, just like DV
became a worldwide standard and this time for both consumer and
pro sides of the market.
No
matter how you hate hearing that, all the news you're watching on
TV and all the video masters that hold movies (and their soundtracks)
and the vast majority of albums recorded throughout the 1980s and
1990s were done, edited and mastered on Sony tape equipment, whether
PCM, DV-Cam, Beta SP or DigiBeta.
Anyway - Sony's big "pro-sumer" RtR may not have been
marketed as much as the likes of TEAC,
Akai
or Technics
but they were just as good. Sometimes even better :) Problem is
: Sony never really cared to advertise about them, busy as it were
cornering the real professional market !
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