In any case, at least I know now that I can't repair it, and might as well junk it and start looking for a model that was built back in the 80s or 90s if I want to play back my cassettes and make new ones. ![]() Connecting your cassette player to your audio interface, field recorder, or internal soundcard will depend on the input and output connectors of the respective devices. After all, new vinyl players still get produced and used (although granted they do occupy a different price range than cassette players). You can then load the tracks into a computer at a later point for editing, labeling, and organizing from the recorder’s microSD/SDHC card. While I agree with you that it is my fault for not researching more intensely, I think it's not entirely unreasonable that a newcomer would see a cassette player that was made in the last 5-10 years and believe that it could at least function. I vaguely remembered spending like $30-50 on new walkmans in the 90s, so the price seemed to be in the ballpark range at least. I honestly believed that since cassettes were such an old technology, that it would be a relatively easy to find a reasonably priced, half-decent cassette player that could also make some lo-fi cassettes to sell at shows (whenever they happened again). ![]() I was kind of broke, and I bought a cassette player that had enough good reviews to justify its purchase ( ). I genuinely didn't know, I only just started getting back into cassettes since the last year or so. Sony TCWE475 Dual Cassette Player / Recorder (Discontinued by Manufacturer) 4. ![]() Homie, look, I'm sorry that this is an issue that pops up often here.
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