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Vintage Orrtronic Continuous Tape Player P300 - Magnetic Tape Recorder Tapette
$ 131.36
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Vintage Orrtronic Continuous Tape Player P300Magenetic Tape Recorder/Player
Unit is untested. Was taken partially apart for pictures and to clean. Just the unit... no cord or tapes
It was cleaned up cosmetically and shows off well.
The three knobs on the front switch as they should. One knob is missing. You must push in the middle knob then select before letting go.
few small parts. come sperate. The bulb that lights of the red indicator on the front came loose. One washer crumbled and an extra. I did notice a couple screws missing.
approx. 10-1/2" deep x approx 8" wide x approx 6" tall
little history...
John Herbert Orr
(August 19, 1911 – May 6, 1984) was an Alabama entrepreneur
who formed
Orradio Industries
,
Inc., a high-technology firm that manufactured magnetic recording tape for both professional and consumer markets.
In 1945, Orr was among the U.S. Army Intelligence officials who investigated this technology, which was originally developed in Germany during the 1930s. According to one story, in 1945, General Dwight D. Eisenhower wanted to record a message to the German people, which he did using captured German tape. However, the tape had not been completely erased, and Hitler's voice, so the story goes, could be heard intermittently along with that of Eisenhower. Eisenhower ordered that no more captured tape could be used, and ordered Major John Herbert Orr to use captured German scientists to set up an American tape manufacturing facility. Paper tape was the medium in use at the time, but the German engineers had been experimenting with a plastic based tape; they provided Major Orr with the data on this and it became the basis of the modern audio and video recording industry. When the German engineers gave Orr their studies on plastic tape, the only place in Europe manufacturing the material was a factory making ladies imitation leather purses.
Orr's early knowledge allowed him to establish Orradio in 1949. When, after some uncertainty, tape became the standard medium for magnetic recorders, and as other uses such as data storage and videotape appeared, Orradio's sales expanded rapidly in the late 1950s. Orradio produced the first commercially available audio tape, video tape, and computer tape in the world. The company was purchased by a larger competitor, the Ampex Corporation, in 1959 when Ampex decided it was cheaper to own the plant than to keep buying all their tape. Ampex spun off its magnetic tape division in 1995 as Quantegy and merged with magnetic tape division of 3M a year later.
Orr then founded OrrTronics, which developed the lubricated tape used in closed loop tape systems, also called endless tape cartridge. The system, called the "Orrtronic Tapette", was produced in versions for home, commercial, and automotive use, and was offered as a prize on television game shows. Evolving from a single track mono design (which stayed in production as the radio station "cart") through two-track mono and stereo versions.
OrrTronics was then sold to Delco Battery and Orr formed Orrox Corporation, which specialized in hard disc drive controllers, refurbishing of Quadruplex videotape recorder heads, and computerized video tape editing systems for TV broadcasters and post-production houses. The latter product, CMX Systems, was for many years the preferred editing system for 80% of all television programming originating on videotape.
Orr retired from Orrox in 1976 and founded Orr Proprietorship, which transcribed recorded media, from early cylinder recordings to 1960s tape recordings, onto modern tape for preservation.
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Thanks!
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Pack what you can for 8.00 in a padded flat rate or a medium flat rate for 13.79.