joeybabe25 said:I wonder if the industry ever tried to ramp up a consumer cart?
Joe
8-track and 4-track tapes back in the 60s and 70s were essentially carts.
joeybabe25 said:I wonder if the industry ever tried to ramp up a consumer cart?
Joe
joeybabe25 said:johnbasalla said:That was funny since he couldn't play it anyway.
Keeping some old gear around can have its rewards well into the future.
I wonder if the industry ever tried to ramp up a consumer cart?
Or dial a radio. Even though millions still do, we think of it as "turn the knob to station X, not dial up so and so.snarfdude said:I came to the realization awhile back that few students or pros getting into the industry have even touched a cart....much like kids and the dial telephone.
trackertalent said:Top 40 wouldn't have sounded as hot as it did without carts.
What an amazing innovation carts were.
Mike Sheridan said:Lots of people had a love/hate relationship with cart machines, that might explain it. He could have also been told to destroy them.
jh said:8-track and 4-track tapes back in the 60s and 70s were essentially carts.
joeybabe25 said:I loved carts too. But there was something about cueing up a record or "slip-cueing" that made you really feel a part of the whole production. Certainly more than todays digitized stations where the jock basically can just sit there for a shift and not do much more that switch on a mike.
Better, I know. And I prefer it. But getting a record out of its slip cover with just seconds to go before you need it, cueing it up, and blam you're off, that's the radio of my youth.
Mike_Rafone said:At WGAU in 1967 we had a 55 minute cart loaded with anArthur Godfrey show to be used in case the network line went down or for some other reason The Old Red Head and his show wasn't available at 10:07 AM M-F.
Got curious one Saturday night and ran it on a spare player throughth e cue channel. It was sustained and sounded formatted intentionally as a "rescue-cast." Then had to get back to work, and had to let the thing cycle through to its cueposition, then very carefully put it back in the storage rack.
joeybabe25 said:jh said:8-track and 4-track tapes back in the 60s and 70s were essentially carts.
Could you play those in radio cart decks?
Joe
in which the roller slammed in through a hole in the bottom of the cart when you inserted it into the machine. The little hole tingy was an easy way to carry them on your thumb.pinch-roller built in to the cartridge, unlike industry carts.
Savage said:Actually the automobile cartridges were in two different formats depending on whether they were 4-track or 8-track. The 8-tracks had the pinch roller built into the cart. 4-tracks were mechanically identical to broadcast carts. Dual-system car tape players had a deployable pinch roller - when playing 8-tracks the little roller was blocked from engagement by the physically different cart body.
Learn something new (or in this case, old) every day. I've never actually seen a 4-track cart. Sort of like I've never seen a 16 rpm record -- but I know they're out there!Savage said:Actually the automobile cartridges were in two different formats depending on whether they were 4-track or 8-track. The 8-tracks had the pinch roller built into the cart. 4-tracks were mechanically identical to broadcast carts. Dual-system car tape players had a deployable pinch roller - when playing 8-tracks the little roller was blocked from engagement by the physically different cart body.
"Wasn't LEAR...as in Bill Lear...as in Lear-jet the promoter of one of the consumer cart formats?"
Darth_vader said:"Wasn't LEAR...as in Bill Lear...as in Lear-jet the promoter of one of the consumer cart formats?"
Yeah, he developed and pushed the later 8-track format, which was his "refined" version of the earlier Fidelipac, which an LA-based car dealler, Earl Muntz, used for his 4-track system.