No, they are more prone to damage.
You could swap in any CD player, so long as you knew how to wire it up.
Cassette Tape
The Sony Walkmen, which have been around for two decades, will last very long on two AA's.
AnswerFirst you press eject on the player. This opens the door which you have to put the cassette into. Then (and a safety WARNING is issued here), you insert the tape into the slot provided. Then you push the door closed and press play! A simple but genius invention which had touched many hearts, minds (and throats) along its history.AnswerIt worked the same way a CD player or DVD player works: you put it in and press play, fast forward, rewind, stop, pause, etc. Except, with a cassette player, "rewind" literally meant rewinding the actual tape inside the cassette. The music or video was encoded on one long plastic ribbon that wound around two spools (like spools of thread). When the tape played, it wound itself around the spool on the right, and as the winding tape passed over a certain place, the material on it would be played. When you rewound it, it would rewind itself back around the left spool.
Try looking at this entry about the Philips compact cassette here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compact_Cassette
It sounds to me like the read head in your cassette player is faulty, as long as your sure the tape you are using to test it is good then the bottom line is pretty much that you will need to replace the tape player. In the mean time it is safe to use it, however you will have to live without the left channel.
847 and a half
i am a basketball player how long do i have to wait before playing again,had appendix removed last Thursday night
It depends on what you're trying to say. "This won't last long." "I wish it would last longer."
It would last as long as the golf ball. It would only wear away with play.
34
1981