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AMPEX MODEL 300 TAPE RECORDER FOR PARTS OR RESTORATION

$ 448.8

Availability: 100 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Type: Tape Recorder transport
  • Model: AMPEX 300
  • Brand: Ampex

    Description

    Untitled Document
    USED AMPEX MODEL 300 TAPE RECORDER FOR PARTS OR RESTORATION
    This
    Ampex 300 tape recorder was purchased from the estate of Ampex pioneer William Palmer in the late 90s.
    This machine is listed
    ’as-is’ for parts or restoration only
    .
    It does not run
    but
    it is restorable
    and probably wouldn’t be that much work or expense.
    There is a
    1/4” full-track
    head block in this machine w/ (3) heads; erase, record & reproduce. They are good from what I can see, w/ minimal wear. I took the best photos I could, there was not much access.
    The underside of the machine is shown in one of the photos - the deck is sitting on a milk crate.
    This sale includes the two Ampex hubs shown in one of the photos.
    A second Ampex 300, photographed in a roll-around cart, has been listed in another ad.
    The
    65” x 28” by 25”
    roll-around rack/cart is listed separately in another ad.
    I prefer pickup in San Francisco but will ship the tape recorder to any address world-wide serviced by UPS or USPS.
    The tape recorder measures 25” x 19” x 14” and it weighs 45 pounds. A shipping crate will be needed unless the buyer picks up the machine in person.
    The model 300 is too bulky and too heavy to be packed in a cardboard box but I can build a sturdy plywood shipping crate for 0, if it needs to be shipped.
    The first production Model 300 was shipped in the late spring of 1949
    .
    At the time all performance characteristics of the Ampex Model 300 Magnetic Tape Recorder equalled or exceeded the standards of the National Association of Radio & Television Broadcasters. All Ampex audio recorders reproduced a tape frequency characteristic which had been accepted as standard by the NARTB.
    Harold Lindsay designed the mechanical parts and Frank Lennert designed all of the electronics of the Ampex Model 300,
    including the record/playback electronics.
    It used 10.5 inch reels, 1/4-inch tape facing inward, and was a two-speed machine switchable to either 7.5 or 15 ips.
    Harold designed a new head that, when compared to the one for the 200A, was less expensive, performed better and was more uniform from head to head.
    The new head made tapes more easily interchangeable from machine to machine than was possible between 200A recorders.
    A 15/30 ips version, the Model 301, was introduced shortly after that. The 300 transport became the platform for many versions of both audio and instrumentation recorders. Overall about 20,000 of these transports were produced.
    Tapes were not interchangeable between the 200A and the 301 due to several factors. First, the tape on the 200A had the oxide facing outward, whereas on the 301 it faced inward. Second, the record equalization was different, and the 301 was designed to use 3M 111 tape instead of 3M 112 tape that the 200A used.
    The Model 301 had better frequency response, lower noise, and lower flutter than the 200A. Sales of the Models 300 and 301 quickly outstripped those of the 200A, which was soon phased out; in the end, a total of  only 112 Model 200A recorders were manufactured and shipped.