Title: Cassettes are cool again: Surge in popularity for the retro device has led to the revival of magnetic tape manufacturing lines Source:
Daily Mail URL Source:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet ... tapes-threat-experts-warn.html Published:Nov 6, 2017 Author:Shivali Best Post Date:2017-11-14 06:32:08 by Deckard Keywords:None Views:1014 Comments:18
They were the must-have item of the 90s, and now, it seems cassettes are cool again.
The surge in popularity for the device has led to a shortage of magnetic tape.
National Audio, one of the only companies in the US that produces cassette tapes, says it has less than a year's supply left.
Now, its co-owner and president Steve Stepp says he is planning to build the US' first high-grade tape manufacturing line in decades to help meet demand.
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They were the must-have item of the 90s, but it seems that cassette tapes are now under threat. Experts have warned that the world is running out of cassette tape, and new production methods are required
Experts from National Audio are developing new ways to make magnetic tape using rust and a 62-foot-long contraption that is normally used to create magnetic strips on credit cards, Wall Street Journal.
If production goes to plan, the machine should produce almost four miles of tape a minute by January.
Speaking to the Wall Street Journal, Stepp, said: 'The best tape ever made.
'People will hear a whole new product.'
While you may think of cassette tapes as old-fashioned options, many people are still interested in the format.
Lee Rickard, 32, co-founder of independent record label Burger Records, which is based in Orange County, a suburb of Los Angeles, explained the appeal, saying: 'Music just sounds different on tape, sometimes as it was originally intended to sound.
'Cassettes are compact, tangible, instant collectables, often with original and numbered artwork and as cheap as a cup of coffee, so you can support your local artist without buyer's remorse.
'We worked with Green Day to produce a cassette version of their Dookie album, but most of the acts are young and unknown for now.'
Among National Audio Co's repeat customers are heavy metal band Metallica, Twenty One Pilots, and several up-and-coming bands.
But cassette tape is no longer widely produced, and since 2014, when National Audio Co's main producer ceased production, stockpiles have been shrinking.
Tape-making is not a simply process, and requires a finely calibrated slurry of metallic particles and polyurethane, miles of Mylar, 48 feet of ovens, a small amount of radioactivity and a very precise slicer.
And while Mr Stepp has kept the details of his new production method a secret, he hopes to ship the first cassettes with the tape by January.