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TEAC AD500 Integrated CD/Cassette Deck

TEAC AD500 Integrated CD/Cassette Deck
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Manufacturer: TEAC
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TEAC AD500 Integrated CD/Cassette Deck Features

Single-disc CD player
Auto-reverse cassette deck
Dolby B noise reduction
Assign CD tracks to different tape sides
Headphone jack with independent volume control
 

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Additional TEAC AD500 Integrated CD/Cassette Deck Information

Teac AD-500 CD / cassette deck is a fine piece of high quality electronics put to great use. It features continuous player for CD and tape, CD sync dubbing and timer play. It is stuffed with the most up-to-date integrated circuitry and utilizes the best materials for tape heads and CD pickup mechanisms. It's the fine choice of an audiophile.

 

What Customers Say About TEAC AD500 Integrated CD/Cassette Deck:

The unit is now with a pile waiting to go to the dump and was essentially a couple hundred bucks flushed down the toilet. Shortly after my warranty expired (of course), I accidentally bumped the CD tray when it was open one day, knocking the gears and everything out of whack, and it was all over.never could get the tray to go back in right or the CD door to stay closed. Handle with care. I used to have a lot of respect for TEAC products, but some years back they took the cheaply-made consumer electronics route and it's been downhill ever since. That said, this is a decent machine, and I enjoyed it during its short life.

The similarity was much closer here. I currently have a Pioneer CT-W606DR, which remains the best sounding cassette player I have ever encountered or read about online (that has a reasonable cost). This might boil down more to a matter of personal preference rather than absolute superiority.So, alas, I'm going to return this unit and limp a long with the functional deficiencies in my current equipment in exchange for better sound quality. The Pioneer had far greater treble response, yielding a far more vibrant and crisp sound.

(1) I really wanted to be able to control cassettes with a remote control and (2) I wanted a "real" single-disc CD Player that functioned as such, instead of using a DVD player to play CDs, which is slower and inconvenient--the track number is not displayed, the "screen saver" often engages so you have to hit buttons more than once after a time, etc.The first thing I did when I unpacked the TEAC AD-500 was to set it up and attached it to my tuner so that I compare it against my existing equipment. The tonal quality of the reproduction was a bit richer and the highs were a bit more crisp. Let me start by saying that when I scanned all of my CDs in to iTunes to work with my iPod and iPhone, I deliberated long and hard about the compression rate I would use, and I finally settled on 320-bit AAC with explicit stereo, because I really could tell the difference between various setting after comparing them with carefully chosen songs. And I do regret a bit not having done Apple Lossless Format now. I chose two cassettes to compare mainly because I new that the magnetic tape in them was in excellent condition and has great sound quality. However, when you compare it against my current Pioneer, it paled in comparison.

However, I have to say that the Sony came out slightly ahead of the TEAC. There was also a far greater "depth" with the Pioneer--that feeling that you can reach into the sound to touch the individual instruments. I mean, the TEAC does sound far better than my two Sony cassette walkmen. I was comparing it to a Sony DVD-Recorder RDR-GXD455. These were "The Dealer" by Chico Hamilton and "Introspective" by the Pet Shop Boys. However, the promise of a remote control was not enough for fogive the lesser sound quality.The CD section of the TEAC is less dissapointing. By this I'm trying to say I have sensitive ears.I was so looking forward to the TEAC AD-500 to solve all my problems.

I should say that I had Dolby noise reduction off on both units. The TEAC sounded pretty good, I must admit. The cassette player was the most disappointing. I tried both with speakers and with headphones.

They need a good solid click to activate.CD audio plays through the tape outputs, as well as the CD outputs.Wish I'd avoided this one and bought separate units. Tape counter inconsistent.It takes a looong time for CDs to be recognized.CD controls are insensitive. Cassette section failed within first year. Tapes auto-reverse and auto-stop randomly.

Sound is very good for cassettes. Good for both CD and Cassette tapes with easy functions for those needing user friendly features.

The TEAC's laser is a powerful tri-beam type not seen since the early days of CD's. The tape itself sits very deep in the machine. According to the manual's spec page, this is a 4 times oversampling machine with an analog filter. As a matter of fact, this is more expensive because we're talking about some very delicate discrete circuitry in that filter. I tried laying some audio on a couple of different brands of tape and there was not much difference in the sound from one to another.

All in all, this is a fabulous, high end, old school piece of audio gear. You have to do that from the remote. The speed is dead on and the wow and flutter is extremely low. The door is very robustly built with a magnifying window that actually enlarges the window in the tape so you can look at a glance and see how much tape has gone by. However, the record play response was great. There is no cost savings using 4 x and an analog filter. The last time that happened to me was when I bought an Onkyo machine back in 1990. Cassette bias is usually somewhere around 40 kHz but Sony put out some decks a few years ago with bias up around 150 kHz.

You can really slam the levels and get very little distortion on playback. The only one I'll miss is the time function that allows you to show remaining times on track and the whole CD while it is playing. This machine performs like those decks so I think TEAC has gone that way too. Here are a few highlights:First off, the machine is built like a tank.

This is one of the best CD players I have ever heard. I don't have an alignment tape but I have several tapes I know for sure are prefect. I grabbed some of them, put the output in mono, with screw driver in hand, ready to tweak the heads and they did not need anything done to them at all. The CD player does not have a peak search function on it. They are perfect and the technician sealed off the azimuth and height screws with some dope so it is not going to change anytime soon.

There is no bias adjustment on this machine at all, either manual or automatic. The TEAC arrived today. The transport controls have a solid feel and the solenoids must be huge because when you work them they give out with a loud 'ker-chunk.' As I suspected, the Dolby does sound better because it's only B circuitry and nothing else. With the Dolby B on, you have a hard time hearing any hiss at all. The CD section is amazingly good.

I'm gong to be listening to a lot of CD's in the next few weeks.The cassette section was a bit of a surprise because it was in perfect alignment right out of the box. I have been playing with it all evening. Very impressive. My current Sony changer is a great sounding machine but this TEAC has something extra going on that I can't quite put my finger on. In comparison, my Sony is eight times over with all digital filtering.

The stats only get better with chrome or metal. A couple of down points. This thing is built to last and it has the heft of a pro machine. No biggie. That is about the same performance you get from a broadcast cart machine or a high end quarter track tape recorder at 7&1/2 ips.

It must be a very high frequency bias circuit because the noise is so low. There are several functions you cannot access from the front panel and you have to use the remote control to get to them. The automatic CD dubbing is at a fixed record level and a really loud CD will overload the tape. That's with normal tape. My Sony does so I can dub off of that one when I do level critical stuff.

The noise levels are phenomenally low on this machine, as well. I like doing it manually anyhow. Now, that's saying something because I have used pro Sony and Denon machines in radio stations that cost several thousand dollars. TEAC is doing something unusual with the bias on these machines. The specs say that the noise is down around -57 dB with it turned off and you get near -70 dB with it on.

This is very old-school design and I can only come to the conclusion that TEAC did this on purpose. I put the screw driver back and that was that.

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