tapemuzik.de |
My thesis is that these have maintained roughly the same dimensions, but have decreased in thickness over time. I don't own a gaussmeter (dang) so I can't measure the effectiveness. I'm using a cheap Fowler caliper that uses a 1⁄1000 scale so we are doing this in thousandths like a luthier. I'm also using a mix of blank stock and retail cassettes to see if there's any difference there. This does require in some cases that I destroy the shell to access the magnetic shield. For their sacrifices we give our thanks.
artist/title |
MFR |
Year |
size |
---|---|---|---|
The James Gang / Passin' thru |
AMPEX |
1972 |
30 thou |
J. Geils Band |
N/A |
1973 |
28 thou |
Rolling stones - Beggars Banquet |
N/A | 1976 |
25 thou |
Certron HD90 |
Certron | 1977 |
24 thou |
SONY CHF 90 |
SONY |
1978 |
30 thou |
Maxell UD II 100 | Maxell | 1981 | 20 thou |
Jorma Kaukonen (bootleg) |
N/A | 1982 | 28 thou |
Rich Little - Comedy Edition |
Radioshack | 1983 | 9 thou |
Maxell UDS II 90 |
Maxell | 1985 |
21 thou |
JVC dynarec GI-90 |
JVC | 1988 |
21 thou |
FUJI DR-II 90 |
FUJI | 1990 |
22 thou |
Rhino Humpers - Intense |
N/A |
1994 |
12 thou |
P.U.S.A. |
N/A |
1996 |
12 thou |
Reach the Sky - s/t |
N/A | 1997 |
10 thou |
WKDU Live Vol 1 |
N/A | 2013 |
11 thou |
Allston Pudding - localz only |
N/A | 2014 |
15 thou |
Tankini - dousuk |
N/A | 2017 |
12 thou |
Heavy Discipline - demo |
N/A | 2019 |
10 thou |
Strange Mono- bail fund benefit |
N/A | 2023 |
21 thou |
Magnetic Responsibility / Naan Cul |
N/A | 2023 |
12 thou |
I kept commercial tapes to a minimum in the sample because their date of manufacture is harder to narrow down. The few I kept are slot or coffin cases which more definitively date to the 1970s. Hypothetically some may date to the late 60s. Despite the haphazard sample, the trend here is pretty clear. I think the overage thickness has decreased by about 30-40%. The thinnest shields are either very new or from old novelty recordings. (I'm looking at you Rich Little.)
While reading up on this I found a Billboard article from 1986. The
article quoted Glenn Maenza, the manager of electronic engineering for
CBS records and IEEE member. [SOURCE]
"Cassette quality is not affected by elimination of the shields since the shield typically reduced the 60/120 Hz level from -23 to -26 dB, relative to audible threshold levels..."
Maezenza did go on to say that he wasn't advocating removal of the shield. But ever cheaper manufacturing delivered the change anyway. Today new blank tapes (if you can find them) often have no shield at all! Starting around 2015, I started noticing new blanks from TDK, Sony and Maxell completely lack the shield. Usually you can't tell from the audio alone. But depending on your deck and how close the motor is to your read head, you might pick up more 60 Hz noise with these newer, cheaper tapes. But if you're using cassettes... you're probably not a hard-core audiophile anyway.
**I may expend this article if I find more reliably dated recent blank tape stock.
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