View Full Version : Nagra and Studer
A couple of pics from Scalford
https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1577/25353830484_a7f4a68bac_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/ECr1um)
Nagra (https://flic.kr/p/ECr1um) by Baz (https://www.flickr.com/photos/barryjp/), on Flickr
https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1467/25891497761_9c16ee3612_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/FrWGeP)
Studer (https://flic.kr/p/FrWGeP) by Baz (https://www.flickr.com/photos/barryjp/), on Flickr
Audio Al
22-03-2016, 16:59
Proper HiFi :)
topoxforddoc
22-03-2016, 22:03
Both are beauts! But the real sleeper is the one you didn't include in your pic Baz. It's the Sony APR5003. Brilliant R2R for a snip compared to these two lovelies :)
Audio Advent
23-03-2016, 00:15
A couple of pics from Scalford
https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1577/25353830484_a7f4a68bac_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/ECr1um)
Nagra (https://flic.kr/p/ECr1um) by Baz (https://www.flickr.com/photos/barryjp/), on Flickr
Such lovely bits of kit! Along with the Stereovox ones, they must be some of the best built equipment out there..
And of course it's not hifi ! It's professional gear designed for professional use. Proper hifi is almost by definition the lower standard stuff :)
337alant
23-03-2016, 17:32
Both beautiful machines :stalks:
Alan
Such lovely bits of kit! Along with the Stereovox ones, they must be some of the best built equipment out there..
And of course it's not hifi ! It's professional gear designed for professional use. Proper hifi is almost by definition the lower standard stuff :)
Did you mean Stellavox? - a portable machine built by a company formed of ex-Nagra employees.
Both are beauts! But the real sleeper is the one you didn't include in your pic Baz. It's the Sony APR5003. Brilliant R2R for a snip compared to these two lovelies :)
It probably didn't look as good , I'm attracted to bling :D
Oh, don't know:
https://sp.yimg.com/ib/th?id=OIP.M98d28ff5bf7693f23aab92748eb2d4a7o0&pid=15.1
Interesting head layout - plenty of room for tape editing/cutting.
Lodgesound
24-03-2016, 14:43
Which indeed was the intention with this design of tape path - these machines were designed primarily to slave lock in edit suites which used one inch C format VTR's to provide additional audio "bounce" tracks whilst editing.......they worked extremely well at it too.
Audio Advent
25-03-2016, 20:13
Did you mean Stellavox? - a portable machine built by a company formed of ex-Naga employees.
Stellavox! Yes I did... :o
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