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-   -   How noisy are reel to reels? (https://www.vintage-radio.net/forum/showthread.php?t=161912)

JayBee66 4th Dec 2019 12:32 am

How noisy are reel to reels?
 
I have a Hitachi TRQ-730D reel to reel. Made in about 1970.

The machine is acceptably quiet in standby, with just the fan running but when I engage the functions; play, record, fast forward, rewind then the mechanics make quite a bit of noise. About the same amount as my old cine projector did.

How can anyone record from a microphone with that racket going on?

I downloaded the service manual and followed the oiling instructions but it wasn't all that dry or dirty. No improvement.

How much noise should I expect?

As I don't have any use for it I might convert it into a tape delay (a la Watkins Copicat), bypass the old mechanics and drive the pinch wheel with a small 12V motor. Just enough to drag a small tape loop around.

In the meantime, if I can quiet it down then I will.

paulsherwin 4th Dec 2019 12:38 am

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
They are certainly not silent in operation, but it sounds as if something is wrong here. Has it ever been cleaned and lubed?

JayBee66 4th Dec 2019 12:44 am

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
Not until I got hold of it. Made no difference. Quiet until the required wheels pinch up to the flywheel. All the wheels have been lubed and run freely when turned by hand. No rubbing or grating.

paulsherwin 4th Dec 2019 12:50 am

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
Can you identify where most of the noise is coming from?

JayBee66 4th Dec 2019 1:16 am

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
I moved out of contact, the wheel that transfers motion from the motor spindle to the take up wheel and the noise is abated. How I quieten that down has me stumped.

If I convert the machine to a delay then I won't need the take up wheel running. The pinch roller down by the heads still runs and will drag the loop around the non-rotating spindles.

Uncle Bulgaria 4th Dec 2019 3:28 am

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
Is this a rubber wheel driving a metal one?

Nickthedentist 4th Dec 2019 8:19 am

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
I had a Sony Machine of the same era that did this.

I’m afraid that I thought the cause was that the idler wheels weren’t as supple as they used to be.

Nick

JayBee66 4th Dec 2019 3:53 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Uncle Bulgaria (Post 1196628)
Is this a rubber wheel driving a metal one?

The motor spindle is splined and there are two wheels that contact it depending on whether the tape is meant to go forward or back. The contact wheels feel like hard plastic but I suppose they could have been more rubbery in the past.

Any way, I disconnected the spring that holds the noisy drive wheel for the take up reel and it's quiet enough for the delay effect that I will use the machine for. I will make a loop of tape and hook it over the wheel spindles.

Ted Kendall 4th Dec 2019 4:01 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
Hardening idler tyres probably have something to do with it, but most Japan, Inc. budget decks were pretty clunky to start with - later models, such as the TC377, were somewhat more refined.

ben 4th Dec 2019 4:12 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
This is a classic symptom of hardened rubber idlers. This can be tricky to solve, rerubbering is probably called for ('Terry' in the USA does this well so I am told). You could also try skimming off the outermost layer to hopefully reveal fresher rubber. I did this by mounting the idler in a drill and using some fine sandpaper on it.

To avoid this completely, you can look for belt or direct drive decks. The Philips N4420, Revoxes, high end Sonys (Tc755, 766) and Tandbergs spring to mind.

paulsherwin 4th Dec 2019 4:20 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
You could also try boiling the idler wheels in an old saucepan for a few minutes - sometimes it helps reduce the hardness.

Hartley118 4th Dec 2019 4:34 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
I recall that my Collaro Studio tape deck would sometimes become noisy due I think to a build-up of rough contamination on the rubber idler that drove the flywheel. Periodically, I used to resurface the idler with medium grade sandpaper and that cured the noise. I didn't need to remove the idler, but just used the capstan motor to drive it whilst holding the sandpaper against it with a suitable screwdriver.

The problem wasn't due to age because at that time the deck was only two or three years old.

Martin

TIMTAPE 5th Dec 2019 8:51 am

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JayBee66 (Post 1196622)
...If I convert the machine to a delay then I won't need the take up wheel running. The pinch roller down by the heads still runs and will drag the loop around the non-rotating spindles.

Sometimes this doesn't work if the machine relies on back tension from the supply reel to help press the tape against the heads. OTOH if the machine has felt pressure pads on the heads then you may get away with it.

I think the Watkins CopyCat machines used a spring tensioned arm to keep the tape taught and possibly a felt pressure pad or gate to create back tension. Sometimes just a pressure pad on the erase head is enough to cause the tape to press enough against the following head(s). Of course a 3 head machine is the bare minimum. I think the CopyCat used 5 heads: erase, record and three playback heads.

JayBee66 5th Dec 2019 2:16 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by TIMTAPE (Post 1196862)

Sometimes this doesn't work if the machine relies on back tension from the supply reel to help press the tape against the heads. OTOH if the machine has felt pressure pads on the heads then you may get away with it.

I think the Watkins CopyCat machines used a spring tensioned arm to keep the tape taught and possibly a felt pressure pad or gate to create back tension. Sometimes just a pressure pad on the erase head is enough to cause the tape to press enough against the following head(s). Of course a 3 head machine is the bare minimum. I think the CopyCat used 5 heads: erase, record and three playback heads.

In play or record a series of felt pads are pushed against the heads. I have tested the machine as a delay and all is fine.

I ordered some Rubber Renue from Farnell to spruce up the pinch wheel. Looking at the idler wheel and others they do feel plastic rather than hardened rubber so I will leave them as they are. With the take up idler removed the machine is quiet enough. In time I will add more playback heads or put the current one on a slider so that the delay can be lengthened. I use my modular synth's attenuators and mixers to do the rest.

I know I am repurposing rather than renovating but this is not the finest reel to reel and it would have gone on a scrapheap if I hadn't have rescued it.

ben 5th Dec 2019 3:49 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
Don't be fooled by the texture. I have seen Grundig idlers which looked and felt exactly like plastic but were rubber (once upon a time).

Nickthedentist 5th Dec 2019 5:02 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
That's remarkably similar-looking to the Sony one I had the same trouble with, a TC-108: https://www.radiomuseum.org/r/sony_t...er_tc_108.html

JayBee66 5th Dec 2019 6:26 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by ben (Post 1196947)
Don't be fooled by the texture. I have seen Grundig idlers which looked and felt exactly like plastic but were rubber (once upon a time).

You're right. I had another look and could see the brass hubs on which the rubber was formed. The rubber on the noisiest wheel is like metal. I think it is too hard for Rubber Renue so I will have to look for replacements.

stevehertz 5th Dec 2019 8:34 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
1) How noisy are reel to reels?

The answer is, how long is a piece of string. They all differ and even then a specific model of deck will vary wildly depending on its state of maintenance, age etc.

2) How can anyone record from a microphone with that racket going on?

In recording studios the recording machines are in a separate control room to where the recording is taking place. So, to obtain the best, quietist, highest signal to noise ratio, place the recording machine in a different room to the mics. That's regardless of the quality of the machine and its state of maintenance.

Finally, the deck you have there is not a particularly quiet one. The manufacturer's signal to noise ratio (never mind any mechanical noise) is quoted as a very average 52dB.

usradcoll1 6th Dec 2019 6:28 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
I bought a Teac R-to-R, three motor deck, model 1230. Except for rewind and fast forward, it's very quiet. I use it every day and enjoy it immensely.
Dave, USradcoll1

Welsh Anorak 6th Dec 2019 7:29 pm

Re: How noisy are reel to reels?
 
Ah, but that's a three motor deck. No rubber idlers to harden. If you decide to go for a reel to reel for recording purposes, then thet's the type to go for. Some of my idler drive ones sound like tractors! If your budget can't stretch to a Revox or similar, then some of the Philips, Tandberg or later Grundigs are pretty quiet - the Philips especially so as their belts will have all but vanished leaving a sorry mess! However once cleaned and rebelted (is that a word?) they are one of the quietest single-motor machines.


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