Ken Kessler assesses the increase in the reel-to-reel presence at the Tonbridge AudioJumble.
Only five months have passed since the previous AudioJumble, but cataclysmic events have taken place in that period, at least for the UK. We lost Queen Elizabeth II, the second-longest reigning monarch of all time and the longest serving British royal ever, fuel prices have skyrocketed globally – thus decimating disposable income – and Putin has continued to invade Ukraine. (That matters to the British not so much because of Russian gas, but because we are Ukraine’s strongest ally and within range of Russian nukes.) Add to that a change of Prime Minister, and a possibly catastrophic mini-budget (unless you’re already a bazillionaire) and you can understand why spirits were slightly dampened at the October event.
Despite all this, I noted a flood of intriguing gems, including a brace of Ampex tape decks, assorted vintage Luxman treasures, rare turntables, and more. This installment covers the tape-related goodies, while the next episode will look at other tasty items. As I am no longer predisposed toward acquiring more gear, as opposed to downsizing my hardware collection, I did pick up a rough Revox D36 in a swap for some vinyl. More than any previous AudioJumble, this one offered too many unusual reel-to-reel decks to contemplate.
What took all of my willpower to resist were a clean Luxman preamplifier, some stunning turntables from Thorens, Fons and Pioneer, a tube tester, and ValvePower’s sublime reborn Leak tube amplifiers. But those will have to wait until Issue 174. As the images here show, cool oddities included an obscure Leak cassette deck (and, yes, the cassette revival is well underway), a Heathkit open-reel not common on these shores, and a plethora of superb Ferrograph products, including two fully-restored open-reel decks, one of which was a unique example as it had been modified to provided both 1/4-track and 1/2-track compatibility.
Most plentiful among the reel-to-reel decks were Akai D4000 models at great prices, not a few Revox G36s, a superb Revox A77, and a gorgeous Akai GX-747 dbx. But I am stopping at 10 decks…unless I get lucky, win the lottery and can find my dream Crown 800.
All images courtesy of Ken Kessler.
Header image: one vendor arrived with 400 home-recorded tapes in top condition.