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A cassette Walkman is a handheld music player which you put a cassette in and headphones in the listen to music.
It turns out that cassette tape is made of a thin plastic layer, which holds a layer of ferric oxide. To put it another way, cassette tapes are using a material related to rust. Being a ferromagnetic substance, ferric oxide stores a magnetic field we expose it to. Please see a detailed explanation in the link.
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.
I think what you are asking is how to re-write over a factory recorded VHS cassette. Correct? If you compare the factory tape to a new blank cassette, you will notice a place (on the left front edge) where the factory tape is missing a small square plastic tab that is still present on the blank. The absence of the tab write-protects the tape and also causes the machine to automatically go to play mode when the cassette is put in. Cover that hole with a piece of tape (doesn't matter if it is clear tape or not) and you're ready to record over whatever was there. To protect your home movies you have on blank VHS tapes, break out the tab after recording. The same applies to audio cassettes. Enjoy.
The Merry Little Put-Put - 1920 was released on: USA: 8 May 1920
A cassette Walkman is a handheld music player which you put a cassette in and headphones in the listen to music.
lols
Back in the day, people used cassette tapes as opposed to our modern day CD's.
for the front, just slide it in the slot, for the changer, press the eject buttong and the CD holder ("cassette") will come out. Put the cds in the cassette and put the cassette back in the changer
put water in it, it is a plant not cassette player
Well, that depends on the teacher. I would suggest that you put it on a USB because very few teachers have cassette players.
It's to keep the heads from slipping and to ensure constant playback, but that's rarely necessary these days.
So he could listen to some cool music.
You will need two cassette players, an audio cable, and some time. Put the cassette you want to copy in a player (now on referred to as the first player), and plug in an audio cable to the headphone jack. Connect this cable to the microphone jack of the other player; insert the blank cassette in this player. Make sure the tapes don't need to be rewound. On the player with the blank cassette, press record. On the first player (with the material you want to copy), press play. Give the first player enough time to finish playing, and your tape will be transferred! Press stop on the other cassette player.
If the car stero has a cassette player you can nip down to your local supermarket and get a iPod cassette adapter. With this you put it into the cassette player and connect the lead into your iPod and play some tunes! the cassettes are usually around £5-£10 and are really easy to use. Hope that helps
It turns out that cassette tape is made of a thin plastic layer, which holds a layer of ferric oxide. To put it another way, cassette tapes are using a material related to rust. Being a ferromagnetic substance, ferric oxide stores a magnetic field we expose it to. Please see a detailed explanation in the link.
It is not possible to take requests for compact disks, videos or spoken word cassettes which are not in stock.