Sounds as if the head is out of alignment. There should be a small screw holding the head down (haven't seen one of these decks for ages). Adjusting one of the screws (might have a spring under it) either looser, or tighter should help get the head aligned. Or of course, take it to a pro car-audio place and they can take care of it for you. The dealer will probably send you to their preferred tech shop anyways. -del
The easiest way to get information from a cassette tape to a CD is to get a radio that has both a cassette player and a recordable CD. As the cassette plays it can be recorded onto the disc.
Most cassette players nowadays supports playing dolby and records at the same time. This is one example -> O Coby O - Portable Am/Fm Cassette Player/Recorder or Sony Standard Portable Player/Cassette Recorder.
VHS cassette systems can be played on a player that has both DVD and VHS systems. The VHS player plays only VHS. The Player will not allow a DVD to be loaded into a VHS system. Summarizing, A DVD\VHS video player has two units which operate independent of each other.
No, they stopped using cassette players before dolby.
Yes,they're widely available.JVC sells a model that plays mp3s,cds and cassette so you can play most of your collection on it.
- get a cassette player that plays the audio tape- route the output of the cassette player to your computer sound card- record the incoming audio with a recording software like Audacity or Reaper- save the audio as MP3 files and burn it to CD with a CD-burner software- You May Want To Remove The Noise In The Tracks, This Can Be Done With Audacity
A mp3 player is fully electronic and has many fewer moving parts than previous incarnations such as the cassette or cd player. As such, it shouldn't matter how high the altitude the location is and all mp3 players should work more or less the same.
Only has radio and cassette. Needs CD stacker to play CD's.
Unfortunately, there are no adapters that will allow you to watch an 8MM tape on a VHS player. What you will need to look for is a camcorder that plays 8MM tapes; from there, you can easily hook up the camcorder to the television.
Actor Timothy Ryan Cole plays the role of Jimmy (the guitar player) and Alex Harvey (mandolin player) plays the role of Ronnie.
A player is a person who plays the game
The Coby CXCD282 does not play in MP3 format. This boombox simply plays CD's, AM/FM radio and cassette tapes for listeners enjoyment.