I had pretty good luck with the 99s, but they weren't as robust as the Tomcat, nor did they have the audio performance. We bought one of the cart prep recorders for the production room at one station, so the carts would be lined up nicely for stereo playback. All of a sudden, our commercial product got real poor. Out of phse problems abounded. I finally figured out one jock had as part of the job dubbing agency stuff, and this was where the problem arose. So, I took myself to the studios one evening to observe and be instructed. It was enlightening. Jock took tonight's production tapes, and a stack of carts. Cart stack set to the left of the recorder. Each cart in turn was put in the machine and run through the record prep cycle, then stacked on the right of the machine. After they were all processed, the top one was recorded, then the next, and so on.
For the Unanointed, the 99 recorder prepped by erasing the cart, then recording a 10KHz tone on it and adjusting the azimuth of the record head to match the fixed playback head, thus ensuring you were recording with the tape azimuth correct for the guides in that particular cart - which guides varied considerably, and then erased the cart again and found the splice. The cart on top of the stack always sounded great.