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Nakamichi Dragon Cassette deck: Vintage Audio Review Episode

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  • Опубликовано: 16 авг 2024
  • In this episode I look at the features of the Nakamichi DRAGON cassette deck as well as measure some of its performance.
    Email your question(s) for a future video to: VintageAudioReview@proton.me
    00:00 Introduction
    01:27 “Tour” of the Dragon
    07:07 Measurement Data
    12:58 Listening Results/comments

Комментарии • 37

  • @scottbennett3119
    @scottbennett3119 4 месяца назад +1

    This is another great review! Thanks. It is amazing that it still performs so well. I remember Julian Hirsch testing and giving his highest praise to the Dragon way back in the 80s. Your review brought me back to those days! This deck was kind of incredible at the time! And on my fantasy wish list!

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  4 месяца назад +1

      Thanks Scott- your comments mean a lot and give me encouragement to continue. The deck from the video was sold by my friend not to long ago. Kinda wished I could have rationalized purchasing it, but at the time I was happy with the CT-9R, which died a few weeks ago, but still have a few other decks to use.

  • @AudioElectronicsChicago
    @AudioElectronicsChicago 5 месяцев назад +7

    It is a masterpiece, collectable classic piece

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  5 месяцев назад +2

      Indeed it is- thanks for commenting!

    • @reginaldbowls7180
      @reginaldbowls7180 4 месяца назад +1

      Too bad it’s so ugly.

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  4 месяца назад

      @@reginaldbowls7180 I beauty like this is certainly in the eyes of the beholder as they say.

  • @jb.2986
    @jb.2986 5 месяцев назад +2

    We have a late model (22,000 S/N) dragon in our $100k plus system. Totally agree with you on the sound. Really sounds great for a cassette deck. There are better decks out there but the Dragon just does so many things well and is arguably the most well known of cassette decks. As you said, it is a classic. Thanks for posting.

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  5 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks for the comments and it would be interesting to hear about your system. The Dragon in the video was sold by the owner a few weeks ago, so I am glad that I got to do a video on it before it left the state.

  • @Diecast_Roof
    @Diecast_Roof Месяц назад

    Thanks keep on and good luck

  • @Ds-xi2sq
    @Ds-xi2sq 5 месяцев назад +2

    Nice to see you do my deck as well

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for the comment- I have one other cassette deck to do at some point....

  • @pervertedalchemist9944
    @pervertedalchemist9944 5 месяцев назад +2

    Hats off to those who still have their deck - as they go for a pretty penny right now.

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  5 месяцев назад

      Thanks for the comment and you are correct- the owner of this deck sold it for a very reasonable price, somewhere around $2000. I am glad I got to review it first.

  • @tonymontana897
    @tonymontana897 5 месяцев назад +3

    Hi and thanks for your videos. Very interesting stuff.
    Just a quick one.
    I have a Dragon and I purchased it as is with a "known fault" and what it is doing is that the sound is quite muffled and not clear.
    In your experience, would you have any idea what could be causing this ?
    I know there are potentially many variables, but any idea would help.

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  5 месяцев назад +2

      Am Glad you like the videos. Muffled and not clear could be that the head alignment is off. Possibly the head did not auto-reverse correctly and is off that way. Could be any number of electronic issues. There are probably some good forums on Dragon repairs, but that is not something I would undertake most likely. There are probably some folks who only repair/recondition these, so if it is beyond your skillset and you want to keep it, I would try to find one of them...

  • @mannytoledo6510
    @mannytoledo6510 5 месяцев назад +3

    I still have mine. I bought it in 1984 while in the Navy. Dont use it much today.

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  5 месяцев назад

      Glad you still have it, but you should put in a tape and make sure it is still working correctly..thanks for taking the time to comment.

  • @vincedebart
    @vincedebart 4 месяца назад +1

    Off topic .. are you going to post the live stream you did a week or so ago ..thanks

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  4 месяца назад

      Thanks for your interest! So, there was only one person that was asking questions, which was ok as there was enough contest for the 30min livestream. At the very end, my wife entered the room I was doing it from in her underwear as she had been sitting in the dirt weeding and took her pants off before she entered- she was not aware I what I was doing. I thought I would be able to edit the video and cut that part out, but the comment part of the stream did not show up, so I deleted it. When I hit 3000 subscribers I will try another one.

  • @cressdiligent
    @cressdiligent 5 месяцев назад +1

    Couldt quite afford the dragon back in the day soni had to settle for the rx 505. Miss that peice, so cool

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  5 месяцев назад

      Thanks for sharing your memory and maybe you will find a Dragon that you can afford at some point!

  • @TechGorilla1987
    @TechGorilla1987 5 месяцев назад +1

    @2:22 - I'm not going to lie - I feel like a cat trying to follow that laser around the screen. The second I zero in on it, it's gone.

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  4 месяца назад

      I appreciate the comment and I am doing things differently now so no laser pointer- I had someone else complain as well. I would say the pointer should disappear within the month.

  • @ManFromLaBamba
    @ManFromLaBamba 4 месяца назад +1

    Grail cassette deck back in the day. The only limitations it had in terms of audio were that of the cassette/media available, and the inherent limitations of the format.
    Cassette’s have a bit of a cult following these days but there is a very limited and expensive range of tapes available.
    But why somebody would shell out the kind of money the Dragon commands used is beyond me. If you have a huge library of tapes, they have likely degraded with time and there is no reason to spend so much on the deck. But hey, for collectors it’s still a grail

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  4 месяца назад +1

      Thanks so much for your thoughtful comments. Most of the cassette tapes I recorded in the late 70's-early 80s still sound ok- for a cassette. The Dragon is definitely a "Grail" deck. My friend sold it to someone who was going to be in town, but lives out of state, and I think paid a reasonable amount for it. I am more an audio gear person and would have been interested in it if I did not have a few other nice decks, though the CT-9R reviewed here died a short while ago. A lot of similarities to "car guys"- that old VW bug while not much fun to drive around a lot, would still be nice to have in the garage and take for a spin every now and then....

    • @ManFromLaBamba
      @ManFromLaBamba 4 месяца назад +1

      @@vintageaudioreview
      Glad to hear your tapes have held up … must be stored well in low humidity , kept reasonable cool and in dark conditions.
      Often the pressure pad that presses the tape against the head degrades because there are made of foam or some similar material. Apparently one can buy replacements to glue onto the leaf spring.

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  4 месяца назад

      @@ManFromLaBamba I live in the desert so it is certainly dry, though the case the tapes were stored in was in the garage. There are now in cassette storage containers that you would buy from Radio Shack or wherever that I picked up at a garage sale. The tapes that have gone bad typically break at the beginning or end and at this point, I just throw them away. I appreciate your commenting!

    • @JK-xp7vm
      @JK-xp7vm Месяц назад +1

      ⁠@@vintageaudioreviewI have a whole Nak system (CA-7, PA-7, ST-7, Dragon Tape Deck) and, for me, it’s all about nostalgia. This is the gear I would go into Tweeter and look at when I was 12. I have fun recording to tapes to see how great the sound quality can be depending on the source. Tapes are easy to find. Just last week I found 6 TDK metal tapes nearby, unopened. I like having friends over and throwing on a tape and getting wtf reactions to how awesome the SQ can be. The orange meters look cool. I also paired everything with era appropriate Celestion 700 SE’s, same brand of speakers I had in junior high! This same sentiment applies to my reel to reel deck too. It’s fun having this giant mechanical machine, spinning reels, making music.

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  Месяц назад

      @@JK-xp7vm Thanks so much for taking the time to share- you are a kindred spirit. Good score the the metal tapes. I have done a little recording onto cassettes, but not a lot. No real space for a R-R deck. But I do have a Quad 8track that I refer as my time machine..

  • @manolokonosko2868
    @manolokonosko2868 5 месяцев назад +1

    Why won't they make them today? They can use the same old designs. Nothing to reinvent. All the research has already been done and paid for. Nakamichi also manufactured one great turntable that would detect how off center a record was, and then make the necessary adjustments by pushing the record on the edge to reduce or eliminate the defect for playback. The center spindle would drop thus allowing the unit to adjust the position of the record on the mat. That was done with almost all analog technology and no other manufacturer has reproduced it. Sadly, Nakamichi joins the likes of General Electric, Sanyo, Relaistic, Emerson and RCA: Brands on the edge of crapola.

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  4 месяца назад

      I appreciate your commentary. I had not heard about the Nakamichi TT, bet they are rare. There is not much of a market for cassette decks these days and not many folks working on them. There are probably a few companies like Tascam that I think are making them....

    • @craigenputtock
      @craigenputtock 4 месяца назад +1

      I wish they would remake some classic nakamichi decks too, but the problem is also tooling up for them, and finding suppliers for parts, etc etc, and all that would cost money on which they probably wouldn't make up a profit unless they sold the machines at impossibly high prices. But who knows, maybe they could make a profit at it and still sell the machines at a reasonable price.

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  4 месяца назад

      @@craigenputtock As I commented in the earlier post- there is not the market for them. Best thing to do is find a classic deck that has been restored or get it restored. I appreciate your taking the time to comment.

  • @dorian-gray
    @dorian-gray Месяц назад +2

    Fast Forward and Rewind make an ugly noise. This deck needs a service!

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  Месяц назад

      Hopefully you can find a tech who knows how to work on them.

  • @lexpee
    @lexpee 4 месяца назад +2

    I think it's an ugly cassette deck that looks chaotic.
    But it's about the sound quality.
    It seems like buttons are missing?

    • @vintageaudioreview
      @vintageaudioreview  4 месяца назад +1

      I would agree that its look may not be the best for some folks. There are no buttons missing, and the sound quality was very good, for a cassette. My friend sold it fairly quickly so there is definitely a market for those decks.