I started listening to music with 78rpm records in early 60s. Then in mid 70s I started listening to Cassettes and once I had few hundreds of them. In 1992 again I started with vinyl but Cassettes remain. But I discontinued Cassettes from 2016 and now listen only to vinyls and CDs. I'm amazed to see to see the home made reel to reel cassette! I wish I knew this when I used them. Well, very recently I started thing of taking a vintage Cassette Deck. --- Monir from Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Muito bem, porém há um outro vídeo no RU-vid onde se pode baixar os ficheiros e assim fazer em 3d essas cadetes de bobina. E já agora seria melhor comprar cassetes de 46 minutos para não ter de mandar fora a restante fita que sobra. Mas parabéns pelo trabalho que faz. É muito mais barato do que comprar uma cassete dessas original.
If the tape is 52 minutes and you initially started out with 60 minutes, you cut off 4 minutes in each direction which I believe if I calculated correctly is 37 1/2 feet of tape. I don't necessarily want to do that to sacrifice time for looks. The crazy thing is some cassette decks don't have a visual window to see that. I think you're very talented to be able to do that, though. Have a great day.
Shorter length isn't the biggest downside as you can just find a short program to record. The biggest problem though is that you have to do everything correct like this channel did, or else you may damage the tape because the reels were glued too tight/ the reels were bent/ etc.
Is the same Corel file used for both printing and cutting on a plotter? Or is there a specialized machine that both prints and cuts? Sorry, just trying to understand...