01 December 2019

Restoring a Kenwood KX-880HX cassette deck


A bit of history


In 1982 Kenwood launched what was to become a long-lived dynasty of upmarket two-head cassette decks. Its origins lie with the KX-900 in 1980. The 900 was the two-head companion to the three-head KX-1000, copying the style of that top of the range model, allied with a belt-drive transport, amorphous head, and various tape access and programming features. The template for the format got established when in 1982 the KX-880 replaced the KX-900, adding Dolby C and, most importantly, a single-capstan direct drive Sankyo mechanism. In the next 7 years no less than 10 models were made to this recipe, slowly evolving and culminating in the KX-5010. After this quality declined rapidly.

  1. 1982 KX-880 = KX-880B: amorphous head, direct drive, Dolby C
  2. 1983 KX-880SR = Basic X1: added TLLE record amplifier
  3. 1984 KX-880SRII: no significant change
  4. 1986 KX-880G: new style, added external bias and record level tuning
  5. 1986 KX-880GR = KX-880D: added Dynamic Bias System, zinc beauty plate
  6. 1987 KX-880HX: added Dolby HX Pro
  7. 1989 KX-5010: new style, added auto-tuning.

Throughout this history the deck has always been accompanied by an identically-styled three-head big brother, the KX-1100 (several versions) and KX-9010. These had the dual-capstan direct drive Sankyo transport mechanism, identical to the one used in the Nakamichi CR-4/5/7.


The reason for these decks being so interesting today is mainly the transport. Single-capstan direct drive is attractive because 1) good belts these days are hard to find and expensive, and 2) a single-capstan mechanism is easier to maintain and safer for the tape than a double-capstan drive that is not 101% healthy. As such it is likely to perform better than a double-capstan (my TEAC V-1RX beats any twin-capstan Nak here on wow&flutter).

The Sankyo three-motor single-capstan direct drive is curious in that it bridges the gap between the single-capstan belt drive mechanism found in the two-head Nakamichis of the BX, CR, Cassette Deck, and DR series, and the dual-capstan belt or direct drives found in the three-head Naks as well as several Yamahas, Kenwoods, Onkyos, TEACs, Kyoceras, Harman/Kardons, and NAD 6300. Perhaps due to a possibly limited marketing appeal in the 80s due to its single capstan the direct drive version is rare: as far as I know it was only employed in this Kenwood series, in the Onkyo TA-2055 and TA-2066, Kyocera D-601, and Rotel RD-870. Before that a two-motor solenoid-operated version sat in the Onkyo TA-2050 and TA-2060, Sansui D-350M and D-550M.

So I was glad when I could pick up a near-mint but defective KX-880HX. With all its technological refinement, would it be a competitor to my Nakamichi CR-2? On paper it surely looks like a winner: 1) better transport, 2) better head, and 3) HX Pro, allowing bandwidth extension without resorting to the aggressive underbiasing Nakamichi employed in its CR and DR 2-head decks.

Documentation

Despite this series encompassing many models, there are not many service manuals freely available. The full SM for the G is here, part of the HX manual can be found here and the KX-5010 here.  The circuit designs of all these decks are similar, but still differ more than enough to make interpolation between models a risky business. In some cases can it be useful to also look at the manuals for the three-head siblings (1100 and 9010).


Fixing it up

Upon arrival the deck could barely wind a tape, and play lasted for no more than a few seconds, too little to even assess if it could produce any sound at all. Suspecting a lazy, dead-spotted reel motor I kept trying until I got it in fast forward, and then kept it there for hours, even days. This helped, and after this it could play a tape more or less completely to the end. But not always. Upon removing the transport and taking it apart the reason became clear: the backtension belt had ruptured and its parts were fouling the supply reel. This was easily rectified with a fresh belt. This, and another dose of fast winding back and forth made the transport reliable again. For a while ...

After a few weeks of rigorous testing the reel motor started stalling again. Ultimately I replaced it with a Mabuchi RF-500TB-12560, taking care of readjusting torque.





















I proceeded with cleaning and lubricating the transport insofar possible.  Contrary to the Nakamichi versions of this mechanism the reel motor is driven through a series resistor, entirely without any means of tuning and with a reputation of producing excessive torque. Luckily my torque cassette showed a slightly bouncy 40-50 cm.g, which is entirely as expected.

Measuring speed and wow&flutter with TEAC MTT-211 or my own speed tape made on the V-1RX then gave quite good results: long-term averaged 0.031% WRMS.



Not the smartest design

The Kenwood is very service-unfriendly. The beauty plate is a thick piece of zinc, wider than the transport itself. It is used to fix the transport to the frame. In order to remove the mechanism the entire outer front panel has to come off. But worse is that the beauty plate serves as a mechanical reference for the cassette: the transport cannot be operated without the plate in place. This is inconvenient, making it impossible to inspect the operation of the reel drive. It also seems a bit daft, as the cassette's position should be directly referenced to the transport, and not via some man-in-the-middle and its associated tolerances.




















The deck refuses to run without a cassette in the well, using a switch in the top-right corner as a presence sensor. I quickly isolated the two contacts with a piece of tape, after which the transport could be started without a tape, even with the door open.




















Operating the deck with the transport removed is full of pitfalls. I normally put a transport on a bridge laid over the deck itself. This is often necessary because of the limited length of the various cables between the motors, heads, and the deck's circuit boards. This method never caused me any troubles. So naturally I tried the same with the 880.




















During initial azimuth alignment and playback response measurements I found the signal of both channels to be remarkably instable. Further there was a wash of HF spuriae, spaced 700Hz, around 12kHz or so, and a massive peak of noise around 23kHz. Signal to noise ratio, as measured, was pretty bad. Inspection of the signal in the time domain showed fierce spikes at a repetition rate of 15 to 190 ms, depending on the reel speed. After long searching it emerged that the HF components were injected by the display circuit. Moving the transport on its bridge to the very back of the deck cured at least this. The breakthrough from the motor(s) was harder to get rid off. I added filter capacitance here and there, (predictably) to no avail. Playing with earth straps from the transport to the chassis had no result, but it made me think: consulting the SM there was no obvious earth connection between transport and chassis. Poking around with a DVM confirmed this. And then it dawned: the heavy beauty plate also serves as a massive electrical connection between mechanism and frame. Remounting the transport in the deck indeed cured all nasties and made it as quiet as can be expected.




















The service-unfriendliness extends much farther than this. This includes even the transport: Sankyos are normally very easy to maintain. Just as with the belt drive version the control motor can be removed by removing a shiny plate in the front of the mechanism, and the ball bearing beneath it. However, in the Kenwood that plate is lodged under a large nut screwed onto the capstan bearing. So in order to get to the control motor, one also has to build out the capstan motor and bearing, or at least remove that nut, which is hard without exactly the right tool. So I was kept from having the control motor on its own, either for internal cleaning or for making it run for hours on an external supply, to clean the corrosion of its brushes. This time I was limited to cycling the control motor, and the entire head bridge with it, for an extended time!




















The KX-880HX is large and quite heavy. The external impression of quality is good,  but the transport push buttons have a hard and unresponsive feel to them. The deck's construction is very solid. Alas, this solidity comes at the cost of accessibility. The chassis is a bath-tub, hence the bottom cannot be removed to gain access to the main board solder side. Moreover, a large bulkhead runs front-to-back, over the board, connecting the two sides of the deck.  There is one large PCB, in addition to several vertically-placed daughter boards. These boards contain separate functional blocks such as the playback and record amplifiers, Dolby, meter drivers, HX Pro, ... One would expect these boards to use plug-in connectors to the main frame, but no, all of them are soldered hard in place. In order to repair or modify the electronics one has to 1) remove the display boards, 2) disconnect the bulkhead, 3) partly disassemble the chassis, 4) lift out the main board and all that resides on top of it, 5) leave this mess, still connected to the chassis somewhere safe (but where exactly???), 6) desolder the board one wants to work on. And after the job is done, everything has to be reversed before one can even think about testing it. Oof. This is, by and far, the worst deck I have ever (not) worked on.


Replay alignment


Setting azimuth to the TEAC MTT114NA tape, and then tracing the replay frequency graph with TEAC MTT356 showed the normal bass rise due to fringe effect, but also a treble drop starting at 6kHz and reaching -3dB (L) and -4dB (R) at 14kHz. It should be flat, or even slightly rising in the high treble!
 













Investigating the circuit diagram of the replay amplifier showed two interesting things. 1) C41 forms with R45 a time constant of 123 microseconds, close to the theoretical 120 us, 2) C30 forms with R43 and R45 a low-pass filter with its -3dB point at ... 20kHz! Remember my earlier comment about a sharp noise peak at the highest treble, about azimuth signal instability, and about a high susceptibility to disturbances from the FL display? Apparently this forced the designers to close the bandwidth window early, unintentionally (?) hobbling the playback performance.



















Luckily the playback board offers the least-problematic accessibility of all, so I replaced C39 and C40 with 150pF. This boosts the treble above 10kHz significantly, but it also brings up the lower midrange slightly, partially counteracting the desired effect. A change then of C41 and C42 from 15nF to 16.5nF redresses this. (And while I was in there I replaced the signal path elcaps with Nichicon Muse non-polar ones, and added to the supply stabilisation.)




















The ensuing frequency sweep was better indeed, but still had that nagging channel imbalance, with R louder than L. But going back to the MTT-114 azimuth tape this imbalance was gone! Where in my previous experiences setting azimuth to the 114 tape always was good enough to get a decent response from the 356 tape, now I had to set azimuth exactly to the MTT-356 to have a valid result. Indeed, running the 356's 12.5kHz section and tweaking the head screw showed a clear preference for one setting, with R>L to one side, and L>R to the other side. Now the playback response was shown to be essentially flat from 250Hz to 14kHz. After this I reset azimuth to MTT-114.














Record alignment


The provisions for tape alignment are scant. Internally there are two setting pots for bias, and two for record level, as if this were a budget deck. This means that after aligning to, say, a specific type II tape, you are entirely at the mercy of the deck's hardwired presets for types I and IV. Initially I aimed for 1987 TDK SA (close to IEC reference tape U564W), setting bias for a -3dB point at 19kHz. This resulted in a rising bulge centered at 12kHz, while SA on a IEC-1981 deck should measure ruler-flat. 1988 Maxell UR (close to R723DG) in the type I slot appeared over-biased, with a treble depression starting a little over 10kHz. 1994 UR surprisingly did not fare much better.





At this stage overall performance was rather disappointing. But then I went back to the two magazine tests I have of the KX-5010 deck (see below). This model has essentially the same circuits and presumably the same head, so it should be representative. And look! Both tests show a drooping replay response. Both tests show a type II record/play response that is curtailed at 15-16kHz. And one of the tests shows the curious type I response that I got. This is not a Nakamichi, and bias should be set for a reasonable response out to 16kHz, and no more.

The bias generation circuit is interesting. In a normal deck there is an oscillator whose output current flows through variable resistors to the head. Tape alignment is done by tweaking these resistors. In the KX-880HX, having HXPro, the bias is controlled by a uPC1297 IC. This takes as inputs the raw oscillator output, a feedback signal from the head (i.e. music+bias), and a user-defined DC level that represents the desired median bias. That DC level is set by per-channel internal bias trim pots that act as a voltage divider for a main bias level that is itself set by the tape selector switches and the front-panel bias fine control. So bias is controlled indirectly: fly-by-wire.

It is clear that the design rationale for this approach was to support a self-calibrating deck, and that is exactly how it was done in the later KX-5010.

But even in the KX-880HX one can profit from this arrangement: the bias setting DC level at the uPC1297 can be measured with a simple DVM (have a look at the PCB layout, the two points are readily accessible), making it very easy to return to a specific bias level if so desired.





















With the aforementioned bias control voltages set exactly the same for both channels a frequency sweep revealed a significant channel difference above 10kHz. It could well be that the actual bias signals differed between the channels. Possible culprits were the HX Pro IC, the two tunable bias transformers, and the head itself. So I investigated. Removing the deck's back panel, for once something easy, gives access to the bias board's solder side. Measuring on the HX Pro IC's output showed that both bias transformers got the same input signal level. Good. Measuring at the output of the transformers L1 and L2 gave a difference, left being at 88V peak-to-peak, right at 85V. The transformers are tunable, so I reduced the left channel to 85Vpp. I also removed bias coupling capacitors C3 and C4 (150pF, ceramics). They measured the same. But being ceramics, being on-spec at 2V does not imply being on-spec at 100V! So I replaced them with polystyrenes anyway.







Tuning then the bias for SA 1987 gave a reasonable result: -3dB at 18kHz, both channels virtually identical. The response at Dolby level had a -3dB point at 10kHz. Not bad, but nearly any Nak achieves better than this, and without HXPro.


Trying then Maxell UR 1994 with the front bias knob turned to -1 gave a reasonably wide frequency response, although the channel imbalance reared its ugly head again!  Mind, the same tape tested again in the BX-300 had zero channel difference right out to 23kHz. I then tried a UR 1991, which is nearly identical to 1994, and got this with the front bias at -1:





Clearly a fair bit better below 10kHz.

Given that the SA alignment puts the type I zero-position bias up I did an attempt with 1996 Maxell  UDI-CD: a very very good ferric that demands a very high bias on the BX-300. Surprisingly, the flattest result was obtained with the bias knob in neutral position!



And getting back to type II, I slotted in 1994 XLII, my regular tape. Requiring more bias and being less sensitive than SA I set the front panel controls at +1 and +2 respectively, giving this:



The Kenwood's recordings have a strong component of second harmonic distortion (H2). This is caused by the electronics, as the head or tape would produce third harmonics (H3). The origin is probably the record amplifier's mute transistors, as these are clearly ineptly driven (see my V-1RX article), and possibly leaky as well. Too bad that removing the record amplifier board for fixing this is way too much work.

Including this unexpected H2 into the MOL assessment the SA tape could be recorded to +4dB above Dolby Level, with 1.1% distortion at Dolby Level. Not too bad. Factoring in only H3 increases MOL to +5dB. Moreover, H3 distortion is nicely balanced between both channels, indicating equal bias and balanced behaviour of the head.

Maxell UR 1994 attained 1.6% distortion at Dolby Level, and a MOL of +2.9dB. This is decent, but some decks can put 2-3dB more on this tape.


Of Meters and Men


Another issue is the FL record level meter. It looks snazzy, with its 16 active segments and a vast 48dB range. 0dB corresponds to 160nWb/m, and Dolby Level is indicated two segments higher, corresponding to 20log(218/160)=+2.7dB.




















 

Let's ignore that the lower part of the range gives little information (except when recording Holst's The Planets), and that the upper part is forbidden territory due to the highish recording distortion. The main problem is that, while the meters can be calibrated internally, there is only one trimpot, acting on both channels. My deck had a channel imbalance in its meters: right reading 0.7 dB lower than left for equal input. That is annoyingly conspicuous.

























Studying the meter driver circuit shows first a compressing amplifier, and then an opamp as a linear gain stage. The right-channel gain of that opamp can be increased a bit by reducing R8's value. R8  is located at the top of the board, and I succeeded, just, in soldering 470k in parallel to it. Now the right channel was a bit more sensitive than left, but overall it was a great improvement in meter accuracy. Mind: I am not happy with the execution of this bodge mod. It certainly does not meet my normal standards!



Magazine reviews

There are not many reviews on the net of the KX-880HX, but remember that the later KX-5010 is virtually identical, except for its auto tape tuning facility. Click on the image for a larger version.










 

 

 







































Conclusions

The Kenwood KX-880HX is not a bad deck. It is quite good. But with just a little more effort it could have been a legendarily great deck, and it is a shame that it failed to do so. It is held back by its mediocrely-designed electronics, the lack of internal tape alignment facilities, and a build that makes servicing very hard. It is saved by its transport mechanism that should offer a long life and low wow and flutter.




































 
 


Cassette tape measurements: How The Test Was Done

Introduction

End of 2017 I purchased a good-condition Nakamichi Cassette Deck 1 (aka CD1), for no other reason than that I lusted after such machines back when I could not remotely afford them. I also always wanted to learn the real performance of the cassettes I so lovingly used in the 80s and 90s (first with a TEAC V-455X, then with a Nakamichi CR-2E), until CD-R and self-recorded DVD-A erased my interest in analogue recording. So in 2018 I embarked on a project of characterising all tapes I could lay my hands on. I did so first using that CD1, but after a while I changed over to a Nakamichi BX-300E, and I improved my measurement methods.

The photographs are of the actual tapes used for the test, all sourced in Europe with a few Japanese exceptions. Many of these cassettes are very old now. Initially most were mine, and had been well taken care of. Later I started purchasing used cassettes in Belgium, Netherlands, Germany, and Slovenia, to fill the gaps in the collection. These used tapes may have some wear. Finally, with these pages gaining some popularity, people started donating me tapes. U No Who U R. Many thanks!





Machinery

I have one deck dedicated to measurements only: a  refurbished and slightly modified Nakamichi BX-300 with no detectable head wear.

This BX-300 can record quite high levels onto type I and type II tapes without much distortion, making the deck suitable for exploring a tape's maximum output level (MOL). The playback response of this deck, checked with TEAC MTT-356 and ABEX TCC-260 IEC 1981 tapes, is flat within 1.5dB between 200Hz and 10kHz, slightly rising thereafter, as is normal for a narrow-gap head. Moreover, the particular frequencies used in my tape evaluations, 400Hz and 10kHz, replay within 0.5dB of each other. With its bias aligned to a IEC-compliant tape, such as some iterations of TDK SA, a very flat and extended frequency response ensues.  This shows that the BX-300 is a valid platform for tape evaluation, devoid of idiosyncratic record or playback equalisation. I have a full set of alignment and calibration tapes (TEAC, ABEX, BASF, Roth, and A.N.T.), and regularly check this deck for accuracy.

Signal generation and capture is done with an Alva Nanoface USB sound card running at 96kHz, using the excellent audioTester software. The frequency sweeps are made with 190 milliseconds compensation for the latency between record head and play head. (Since Summer 2022 I am using the MOTU M2. It is easier to configure, much quieter, and has a higher input impedance. Its only drawback is a slight premature bass rolloff on the line inputs. This is compensated for in audioTester. Most cassette tests were done before 2022, though, thus still with the Alva.)




Initial setup

For each tape under test first the bias level is determined by making a frequency sweep at -20dB (relative to 200nWb/m ANSI), tuning the deck's front-mounted bias pot to obtain the flattest response below 10 kHz, while still reaching beyond 20kHz, and with up to 3dB peaking accepted above 10kHz.

This is obviously a somewhat subjective process, and not entirely repeatable: when is flat enough flat enough? When is a peak acceptable? Further, a tape's bias requirement may vary somewhat along the full length, especially when the tape has accrued significant wear, as was evident in a number of cases. The bias reported in the test results is as read off the BX-300's adjust knob scale, which runs from -5 to +5: '-' or counterclockwise corresponds to reduced bias current and thus increased treble levels, '+' or clockwise to increased bias current and reduced treble levels.

Measurements

After setting bias the level-related tests are done (sensitivity, MOL, SOL, noise, see below).

The frequency sweeps are then repeated at -20dB, -10dB, 0dB, and +6dB. Due to treble saturation the bandwidth shrinks with each amplitude step. This is normally the worst with ferro-cobalt and chrome type II tapes (due to the higher treble boost of the 70us recording equalisation), and the best with type IV metals. Even so this treble loss is relatively harmless, since the natural spectrum of most music also rolls off with frequency.

The +6dB line often lies less than exactly 6dB above the 0dB line. This is due to compression: the tape progressively returns less signal with increased input. Note that with tapes having a MOL much less than 5dB, the 6dB line is recorded with gross distortion, and thus is not representative at all of real use.

Sensitivity is measured at 400Hz, at -3dB relative to Dolby level for type I and II, and at 0dB for metal.  Sensitivity is not a quality parameter, but an indicator of compatibility. When a tape's sensitivity differs from the exact tape the deck was aligned to Dolby noise reduction will mistrack, resulting in reduced or excessive treble and/or audible pumping and breathing.

Maximum Output Level is measured off-tape, relative to Dolby level, at 400Hz. MOL is determined for 3% Third Harmonic Distortion , as per the industry standard, and also for 1% THD. The difference between the two levels gives an idea of how fast distortion rises with increased input signal. A.N.T. Audio has an interesting collection of distortion-versus-level sweeps for tens of tapes, clearly showing their differences in distortion signature: HD3 v level at 315 Hz for 104 different cassette tapes.

3% THD MOL is also measured at 1kHz. MOL (and SOL for high frequencies) gives an idea of how loud the tape can be recorded safely. This is necessary to exploit its available dynamic range, but it is important to know that many decks are not capable of driving such high levels onto tape.This is one aspect in which the Nakamichi discrete heads excel.

On a good deck dynamic music can be recorded with the peaks at the MOL400(3%) level. Less dynamic, compressed music, or music with a lot of treble or a lot of loud deep bass, can better be recorded to the MOL400(1%) level. When noise reduction such as Dolby B or dbx is used, it is better not to record beyond 0dB at all: the resultant loss in treble extension due to saturation will be multiplied by the noise reduction scheme, while the gain in dynamic range thanks to the  high recording level will be insignificant compared to what the active noise reduction  already is doing. (Dolby C has an anti-saturation network, avoiding this pitfall. But again, why would you hammer a tape for a relatively small gain in dynamic range?)

Saturated Output Level is estimated by increasing a 10kHz input signal until no further rise in output level can be seen. This is a very coarse method, since the output-versus-input curve for most tapes is very shallow at this frequency. It is also a bad metric, as at saturation the signal already is very heavily compressed! A better method would be twin-tone intermodulation distortion, but so far I have not succeeded in getting plausible results with my setup.

Finally bias noise is measured, by recording silence and reading the resulting averaged RMS signal level integrated over a 20Hz-20kHz bandwidth, then subtracting this from Dolby level. This is done unweighted and also A-weighted. One single stereo track (0.6mm) is used. (Some tape datasheets in the past quantified noise for a 1.5mm mono track, resulting in a 4dB better figure.)

As per industry practice the tape's dynamic range in dB is then found by subtracting the A-weighted bias noise from the MOL. The innate noise of the BX-300, i.e. playing without tape, is -57.3dB or  -64.7dB(A) with 70us equalisation, still a few dB quieter than even the best tape.

All levels are relative to Dolby level, which is defined as 200nWb/m ANSI, equivalent to 218nWb/m DIN. If you want to translate to IEC or DIN zero level (250nWb/m), a reference level used on some more recent decks, then simply subtract 1.2dB from MOL, SOL, and noise levels. For example MOL400 = +5dB becomes +3.8dB, and noise = -46dB becomes -47.2dB. Dynamic range, obviously, remains the same.

Note that older decks had their zero level at 160nWb/m (DIN), requiring the addition of 2.7dB to the MOL, SOL, and noise levels of my reports for proper translation.

Validity

The set of parameters shown here is of course not complete. There is much more to tape quality than bandwidth and dynamic range. One must also consider print-through, uniformity, drop-outs, azimuth accuracy, modulation noise, wow&flutter, consistency, heat resistance, and mechanical stability and reliability. From past reviews we know that a cassette excelling in one corner (e.g. exceptional dynamic range) may well drop the ball in another corner (e.g. print-through).

And even all the standard measurements in the world would not describe how a cassette would sound. A tape acts as a level-dependent and frequency-dependent compressor. If we were to make frequency plots at all levels, from -40dB to +10dB, and if we were to measure harmonic and intermodulation distortion at all levels and at all frequencies, then no two tapes would show the same results. They would all have their own distinctive fingerprint-like patterns.

Also, the results here are no absolutes: a first reason is that a tape cannot be analysed outside of a deck. The magneto-acoustical parameters (sensitivity, MOL, SOL) are dependent on the amount of applied bias. Yet, a deck is designed so that the combination of its median (a.k.a. standing) bias and its particular recording equalisation yields a flat frequency response. The designers can select the standing bias according to their own criteria, and then build the entire record path around this. Most decks will attempt to strike a balance between MOL, SOL and bandwidth, but there are also decks that prioritise MOL, at the cost of bandwidth, or vice versa. Such decks likely will obtain quite different results from a given tape. Still, my results should be broadly comparable to those obtained by audio magazines, especially the ones that used standard-issue Nakamichi decks aligned to the IEC references.

A second reason is that the typical TDK SA or the typical Maxell XLII does not exist. Within manufacturing batches there is sample to sample variation. There is variation between batches. And finally there is evolution: ostensibly identical instances of a particular tape may well be different due to improvements - or cost savings - implemented during its commercial life cycle, without informing the public. Variations of +/-0.5dB on key parameters, and even more, are to be expected. Due to this my results may differ significantly from yours or from old magazine reviews.

Dating

The photographs are of the actual tapes. Dating is done based on http://vintagecassettes.com/, with a second opinion from http://www.45spaces.com/audio-compact-cassette-blank-tapes and https://www.ez647.sk/cc/audio.html#typII when needed. These sources for dates are not entirely without error, though.


About these pages

The layout of these pages may appear a bit inconsistent or even sloppy. That is mostly due to issues with Google's blog editor and the rendering in your browser: you never get quite the same result twice, WYSINWYG, and just saving and re-opening a page in the editor is sufficient to mess things up.

Some frequency curves show a quick drop off in the deep bass or the treble. These are artefacts from audioTester when at the start or end of a sweep, and have nothing to do with the true performance of the deck.

Some frequency curves start at 200Hz instead of 20Hz. These are older tests, shortened to save some time.

Finally these pages were never meant to be an actual blog: I just wanted a platform for quickly publishing these notes for myself, accessible from any device at any place. I decided to make this all public only afterwards.

Example: Maxell XLII (1994)




 

 

 

 




Relative bias: (reference)
Relative sensitivity: (reference)
THD @ Dolby level: 0.62%
MOL400(THD=1%) : +1.8dB
MOL400(THD=3%): +5.3dB
MOL1k(THD=3%): +5.5dB
SOL10k: -3.4dB
Bias noise: -54.8dB, -59.2dB(A)
Dynamic range: 64.5dB



INDEX OF ALL CASSETTES



31 May 2019

Cassette tape comparative measurements: archive of older measurements with Cassette Deck 1

Don't look here, this is but an archive of obsolete results. Better have a look at


INDEX OF ALL CASSETTES



Introduction

I recently purchased a good-condition Nakamichi Cassette Deck 1 (aka CD1), for no other reason that I lusted after such machines back when I could not (remotely) afford them. I also always wanted to learn the real performance of the cassettes I so lovingly used in the 80s and 90s (first with BPC, then with a CR-2), until CD-R and self-recorded DVD-A (yes!) wiped out everything.

With the new Nak, and with the excellent audioTester software the time was finally there.

I use a laptop, with as bus-powered USB sound system an Alva Nanoface, running at 96kHz. I only use the Alva for measurements, it is handy and reasonably good. It has XLR microphone/line inputs, and RCA line inputs and outputs. There is one issue with audioTester (also with WFGUI), and that is that in these programs only inputs 1-2 can be used, which are the XLRs, and these have a low input impedance of 6 kOhms. However, with all the cassette decks I measured so far this has not been a problem (provided, of course, that the deck's output level control is at the maximum).

I calibrated the CD1 for the three tapes I intend to use most: XLII (1994), Metal XR (1995), and UR (1994). I did not use the service manual instructions (bring 400Hz and 20kHz to the same level), but rather graphed the entire 20-25kHz frequency response at a level of -20dB (ref. Dolby level = 200 nWb/m ANSI) and judged the resulting plots for flatness. The record level was aligned at -6dB (I found that often at 0dB slight compression already set in). Before all of this the CD1 playback was verified with a TEAC MTT-356 tape, and any channel imbalance was corrected.

In what follows frequency plots are made at -20 dB (shown on the graph at -30 dBFS), -10 dB (shown at -20 dBFS), 0 dB (shown at -10 dBFS), and +6 dB (shown at -4 dBFS). The -20 dB sweep was always made from 20Hz to 25kHz. The other sweeps have progressively less extension, to avoid the curves running into each other. Some sweeps have their low frequency part start at 200 Hz: I initially did so to save on time, but later I figured that having a look at bass compression at 0 dB and +6dB would be interesting, so all later plots start at 20 Hz at each level.
 
Each tape's sensitivity, relative to the XLII of 1994, can be read as the difference of its -20 dB plot and the -30dBFS line in the graphs. I also estimated Maximum Output Level (MOL) at 400 Hz, with the limit set at 3% distortion , third harmonic. (I referred the result to the input side, i.e. I noted how much the input signal for 3% output distortion was above the input signal that resulted in Dolby level on the tape. This method is actually wrong, because it does not account for compression. The industry practice is to measure MOL entirely at the output side. This is what I did in my later series, using a BX-300 deck.)

I sometimes also estimated Saturation Output Level (SOL) at 10 kHz, looking for the highest input level where the output level still was equal to the input. Again this was compensated for sensitivity at 400 Hz, but not for a tape's frequency non-flatness in the treble. As such this a crude estimate only. (In the later instalments of this series the MOL and SOL measurements got more refined, see the comments in those articles. I will update the older articles when I find the time to redo the measurements.)

Before each new batch of tapes I first verified the setup with a control sample of XLII (1994), ascertaining that -20 dB still plotted at -30 dBFS and that the tape path was clean. Then for each tape the treble frequency response was plotted, and the CD1's front panel bias knob, ranged -5 to +5, was tweaked for the flattest and/or most extended response. The plot titles reflect the actual bias setting in use.

The decks used have 'positive control' for the front panel bias knob: turning clockwise, towards '+' increases bias current and thus reduces treble. I write this because there exist decks with the opposite operation.
The Nakamichi literature does not tell us what range the front panel bias fine control operates over. At any rate the effect of the bias knob depends on the tape type: it does almost nothing for metal/type IV. The graphs below are the mid and treble frequency plots of the type II calibration tape (XLII), with the bias knob at 0, -2.5, -5 and +2.5. This gives you an idea.





The photographs are of the actual tapes used for the test, all purchased in Europe. Many of these cassettes are very old now, and have been used in cheap portables and car stereos. Some wear is evident, but generally not much. I tend to take care of my things.

Click on the graphs for a larger version.



Maxell XLII (1994)  (what the deck was calibrated for)





 

 

 

 




Relative bias: (reference)
Relative sensitivity: (reference)
MOL400: +5.5 dB
SOL10k: -5 dB
Bias noise: -55.3dB, -59.6dB(A)

Not much to say. Like many modern tapes the lower treble has a peak that cannot be calibrated away with increased bias, unless a severe loss above 10 kHz is accepted. I assume that such humps were engineered-in to obtain a flatter response at 0 dB.


Maxell UDXLII (1980)




































Relative bias (ref. XLII 1994): -5
Relative sensitivity (ref. XLII 1994): 0.1 dB
MOL400: +2.4 dB
Bias noise: -52.9dB, -56.3dB(A)

Beautiful, not? These were the first type IIs I bought (expensive!) and I used them in an ITT portable. I had to ask my friends to record them for me.

Bias had to be turned to the minimum, -5, yet sensitivity matches the more modern reference. MOL is low. There is 3.3dB more noise than the 1994 version.

Maxell XLII (1982)





































Relative bias: < -5
Relative sensitivity: +1.1 dB
MOL400: +4.6 dB

These were the first tapes I bought in large quantities. By that time I had graduated to an ITT music centre (with metal, Dolby, and LED meters ;-).

Even at bias -5 a tad overbiased. Strange is the large jump in sensitivity compared to the 1980 version. MOL is much better, but that might be an artefact of the high bias used.

Maxell XLII (1985)





































Relative bias: -4
Relative sensitivity: 0 dB
MOL400: +3 dB

One would expect this to be similar to the previous version, but no ...
Bias still much lower than 1994, at -4, but sensivity is back to normal. MOL is mediocre.

Maxell XLII (1986)




































Relative bias: -1
Relative sensitivity: +0.2 dB
MOL400: +4.7 dB

Now it is getting interesting. This tape wanted bias at -1. From this version on XLIIs were fairly consistent in bias needs and sensitivity, and came with decent MOL.

Maxell XLII (1988)




































Relative bias: 0
Relative sensitivity: +0.3 dB
MOL400: +5.3 dB
Bias noise: -52.8dB, -57.6dB(A)

Maxell XLII (1991)





































Relative bias: 0
Relative sensitivity: +0.3 dB
MOL400: +5.8 dB
Bias noise: -54.3dB, -58.8dB(A)

Maxell XLII (1998)





































Relative bias: -1
Relative sensitivity: +0.4 dB
MOL400: +6.1 dB
SOL10k: -6.6 dB
Bias noise: -55dB, -59.5dB(A)

The last real XLII? Compared to 1994 the MOL is improved, noise is the same, but SOL seems a bit disappointing.





Maxell XLII-S (1980)




































Relative bias:-4
Relative sensitivity: 0.8 dB
MOL400: +3.8 dB

The very first XLII-S, and the prettiest. It does seem to better the contemporary UDXLII.

Maxell XLII-S (1982)





































Relative bias:< -5
Relative sensitivity: +2.2 dB
MOL400: ???

Even at -5 it got overbiased, so much that I did not even bother with the higher-level sweeps and the MOL measurement. I never really liked these, but that was probably because the dual gold/transparent foil tended to delaminate on mine, turning these cassettes into an expensive, ugly, sticky mess. (Strangely my XLI-S tapes never did this.)

Maxell XLII-S (1986)





































Relative bias:-2
Relative sensitivity: +1.2 dB
MOL400: +4.5 dB
SOL10k: -6.8 dB

One of my favourites, back then. That does not mean much, as I was using a TEAC V-455X BPC thing. Still too sensitive, but this is when the various XLII-S generations start becoming more consistent.

Maxell XLII-S (1988)





































Relative bias:-1
Relative sensitivity: +0 dB
MOL400: +4.3 dB
SOL10k: -7 dB

I never purchased these. I only recently got a few samples, most of them heavily used. This is the best of the lot. Much like the 1986 version, but with reduced sensitivity.

Maxell XLII-S (1994)




































Relative bias:+1
Relative sensitivity: +0.3 dB
MOL400: +7.3 dB
SOL10k: -3.7 dB
Bias noise: -54.2dB, -58.3dB(A)

This was my standard tape when I got my Nakamichi CR-2. Seriously improved MOL and SOL over the previous generations. As an aside, this Maxell measures very similar to the BASF TPII.

Maxell XLII-S (1998)





































Relative bias:+2
Relative sensitivity: +0.1 dB
MOL400: +6.8 dB
SOL10k: -6.9 dB
Bias noise: -53.8dB, -58.1dB(A)

This was the final chapter. I purchased lots of these, they were dirt cheap. Cassette was clearly in its decline. I virtually stopped taping at this time, so my stocks are still sealed. From the looks one would expect similar performance to 1994, but while this is true for MOL, SOL has suffered a lot, and even noise is slightly worse.




BASF Chrome Super II (1991)

















Relative bias: -4
Relative sensitivity:  -1.7 dB
MOL400:  +0.8 dB
SOL10k:   < -14 dB
Bias noise:  -57.0dB, -61.3dB(A)

A true chrome tape. Low sensitivity. Low MOL. SOL was nearly impossible to measure: I ran out of patience.

Are these results normal and representative of the state of chrome tape in its heyday (the 1980s)?

No, they aren't. It appears that chrome dioxide pigment does not age well, irretrievably losing sensitivity, MOL, and SOL, while shifting the bias needs downwards. Noise is luckily still very low, so this tape remains more or less useable, , but you will need a deck with a very low self-noise to exploit it.

You can find more details on chrome instability in this thread.

BASF Chrome Maxima II (1991)

















Relative bias: -1
Relative sensitivity:  -1.5 dB
MOL400:  +1.5 dB
SOL10k:  < -13 dB
Bias noise: -57.3dB, -61.6dB(A).

Similar as CRSII, but at least the bias needs are closer to the Japanese ferro cobalt tapes. Noise is, again, very low.

BASF Reference Maxima TPII (1993)

















Relative bias: 0
Relative sensitivity:  +0.4 dB
MOL400:  +6.4 dB
SOL10k:  -2.6 dB
Bias noise: -53.8dB, -57.7dB(A)

BASF's first ferro-cobalt tape. Allegedly there was some kind of cooperation with Maxell (according to some), or BASF just purchased and evaluated Maxell pigment (according to others). Excellent performance, aided by a great shell. And ... observe how similar this tape is to 1994's XLII-S.


Denon HD8 (1988)

















Relative bias: -4
Relative sensitivity:  +2.2 dB
MOL400:  +4.7 dB
Bias noise: -50.7dB, -53.7dB(A)

This is the second metal particle type II I ever encountered (the first was a promo freebie That's EM-X that I could not appreciate). I purchased it from a hifi dealer who was kind enough to dub the soundtrack of a concert VHS onto it (we did not have a HiFi VHS at home). The video machine tracked horribly, and the recording was pretty bad. That as an aside.

Pure or metal-enriched type II tapes as a breed should excel in SOL, giving a wider frequency response at -10 dB and 0 dB. They also tend to have a high sensitivity. MOL is decent, but below what ferro-cobalt type I and II can manage. Noise is high, of the same order of a decent ferric, but remember that this is with 70us equalisation, and that makes it a pretty bad performance in absolute terms. What surprised me is the low bias required.

Denon HD8 (1992)





































Relative bias: -3
Relative sensitivity:  +1.9 dB
MOL400:  +4.4 dB
SOL10k:   -0.6 dB
Bias noise: -51.5dB, -54.5dB(A)

That's CD/MH (1990)


































Relative bias: -3
Relative sensitivity:  +2.5 dB
MOL400:  +5.5 dB
SOL10k:   -0.5 dB
Bias noise: -51.1dB, -54.2d(A)

This tape's claim to fame is that now, in 2018, you can still find new old stock for reasonable prices. Much like the HD8 bias and sensitivity make it incompatible. Noise is  high, MOL is average, and the excellent SOL can only be exploited with bright-sounding music. Perhaps best to be used in a auto-calibrating deck, with Dolby B, or for heavily-compressed music.



Sony Metal XR (1992) (what the deck was calibrated for)

















Relative bias: (reference)
Relative sensitivity: +0.2 dB
MOL400: +7.7 dB
SOL10k: +1.2 dB

This was a different sample than the one used for calibration, or the setting had drifted, hence the 0.2 dB offset at 400 Hz.

Sony Metal XR (1989)

















Relative bias: 0
Relative sensitivity: +0.5 dB
MOL400: +7.5 dB
SOL10k: +1.5 dB

If I remember correctly this was the first affordable metal to reach Europe, realised by marrying a more than decent tape to a welded budget shell. Magazine reviews were positive. I had my Nak CR-2E calibrated for this version, and purchased quite a few of them.

Sony Metal XR (1995)

















Relative bias: 0
Relative sensitivity: +0.5 dB
MOL400: +8.0 dB
SOL10k: +2.5 dB
Bias noise: -53.5dB, -57.6dB(A)

I only just found out my remaining stock is mostly the 1995 variant, and not 1992. So after this characterisation exercise I recalibrated my deck for this one.


Maxell MX (1980)

















Relative bias: 0
Relative sensitivity: +1 dB
MOL400: +9.4 dB
SOL10k: +3 dB

As a kid with no more than a small portable radiocassette I (foolishly) bought these, hoping that metal greatness would rub off on my pathetic gear. Or something like that.
Despite this, this second-generation MX is like new, and turns in a stellar performance.

Maxell MX (1982)

















Relative bias: -3
Relative sensitivity: +0.8 dB
MOL400: +7.8 dB
SOL10k: +2.8 dB

Maxell MX (1985)

















Relative bias: -3
Relative sensitivity: +1 dB
MOL400: +8.7 dB
SOL10k: -+3 dB

Maxell MX (1986)

















Relative bias: 0
Relative sensitivity: -0.2 dB
MOL400: +6.1 dB
SOL10k: +1.8 dB

This is the sole sample I have, and much like the 1986 XLII-Ss it hasn't worn well. So I don't know if the worse performance is characteristic of this generation.





INDEX OF ALL CASSETTES