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How do you know if your cassette recorder is running at its rated speed? Is it fast, is it slow? You can buy special timing equipment and hook it up, or you can use this Silly, Silly Tape Recorder project to make your own Timing Cassette, which will cost you nothing (or next to nothing) and give you the information you need. ********* Sponsored by: Get It Done! DSPP Subliminal Messages self help program. Release the power of your subconscious mind to beat procrastination and avoidance and get things done! Read more about the Get It Done DSPP on our Web page at: http://www.clydesight.com/DSPP/GID.html ********* Whether you are a collector of cassette tape recorders, or have just one, it is helpful to know how accurate the overall speed of the machine is. Using this project and some technical expertise, you can adjust your cassette tape recorder so it runs very accurately at its rated speed of 1-7/8 ips (4.7625 cmps in the metric system). The logic is simple. If it is running on speed, it will pass exactly 18.75 inches of tape across the play head in 10 seconds. (1.875 x 10 = 18.75). If it is running fast, it will pass MORE tape across the head in 10 seconds, and if it is running slow, it will pass LESS tape across the head in 10 seconds. This video will show you how to take any cassette and mark it safely (this will not hurt your cassette or your tape recorder) so you can time it and if necessary, adjust the motor speed (on machines that have motor adjustments) to get it spot on! It's a simple project as you will see. Enjoy the video. ********* Copyright Disclaimer: This is an educational video, a critique, and report on an historic piece of vintage audio electronic equipment that is no longer manufactured or sold in stores. It is covered by the Fair Use Section of U.S. Copyright Law: "Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use." The video's opening music is called "Quantum Cube" by Tim Thompson and his XV Orchestra and is the property of Tim Thompson and ClydeSight Productions.