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Tags: Compact Cassette View |
Tags: Compact Cassette View |
The Compact Cassette, often referred to as audio cassette, cassette tape, cassette, or simply tape, is a magnetic tape sound recording (Sound recording and reproduction) format. Although originally designed for dictation, improvements in fidelity (High fidelity) led the Compact Cassette to supplant reel-to-reel (Reel-to-reel audio tape recording) tape recording in most non-professional applications. Its uses ranged from portable audio to home recording to data storage for early microcomputers. Between the early 1970s and late 1990s, the cassette was one of the two most common formats for prerecorded music, first alongside the LP (Gramophone record) and later the Compact Disc. Cassette is a French word meaning "little box."
Compact Cassettes consist of two miniature spools, between which a magnetically coated plastic tape is passed and wound. These spools and their attendant parts are held inside a protective plastic shell. Two stereo (Stereophonic sound) pairs of tracks (four total) or two monaural audio tracks are available on the tape; one stereo pair or one monophonic track is played or recorded when the tape is moving in one direction and the second pair when moving in the other direction. This reversal is achieved either by manually flipping the cassette or by having the machine itself change the direction of tape movement ("auto-reverse").
Logo: Compact Cassette logo (File:Compact Cassette Logo.svg)
Type: Magnetic tape
Encoding: Analog signal
Capacity: Usually up to 30 or 45 minutes of audio per side. Some cassettes have 60 minutes of audio per side
Read: Tape head
Use: Audio and data storage