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Video material: Era HI-FI https://www.era-hifi.com/ Marantz today: https://premiumhifi.lv/en/collections... Pioneer today: https://premiumhifi.lv/en/collections... Aiwa today: https://premiumhifi.lv/en/collections... My system Nr. 1 ✅ Source - TV ✅ DAC: https://premiumhifi.lv/en/products/q3s ✅ Acoustics: Reflector Audio Square 2: https://premiumhifi.lv/products/refle... ✅ Kiwi Quintet headphones: https://s.click.aliexpress.com/e/_DED... My system Nr. 2 ✅ Source - TV ✅ Amplifier with DAC Mission 778X: https://premiumhifi.lv/products/778x-... ✅ Klipsch RP600MII speakers: https://premiumhifi.lv/products/klips... Headphone setup ✅ 7HZ x Crinalce Zero II: https://s.click.aliexpress.com/e/_DCc... ✅ Tripowin Seraph Cable: https://s.click.aliexpress.com/e/_DEZ... ✅ Kiwi ears quintet: https://s.click.aliexpress.com/e/_DED... ???? FiiO Ka 3: https://s.click.aliexpress.com/e/_DlK... ✅ DAC: https://premiumhifi.lv/en/products/q3s Greetings, dear friends. My name is Arkady Zenin and I am the founder of PremiumHIFI. We are located in Riga and we connect people with sound. Cassettes are an integral part of the golden age of HI FI, let's go back in time today and dive into the magical world of analog audio. In 1958, the world saw the first consumer tape recorder with a tape permanently located in a removable cartridge - the RCA cartridge tape recorder. At that time, tape recorders with reels were popular among true music connoisseurs. But for ordinary users, they remained complicated and inconvenient, because it was necessary to manually load large reels with tape. RCA Victor (later simply RCA) and Bell Sound realized this problem and tried to make tape recorders accessible to everyone. They offered a new format - a cartridge that could be easily inserted into a tape recorder. This was a big step forward: now there was no need to suffer with reels and tapes, it was enough to simply insert the cartridge and you could enjoy the music. However, everything turned out to be not so simple. The first cartridge tape recorders faced a number of difficulties. Firstly, it turned out that the catalog of pre-recorded media/cartridges contained fewer recordings than advertised. Secondly, it took longer to set up production than planned. Finally, the sound did not satisfy the requirements of audiophiles, who did not find the sound of such tape recorders truly exciting. Five years later, in 1963, Philips introduced a new invention to the world - a mono compact cassette with the ability to record and play back both ways. Initially, the compact cassette was intended exclusively for portable dictaphones. The width of the magnetic tape was only 3.81 mm, and its speed was 4.76 centimeters per second. Which, compared to a studio reel, flying at a truly cosmic speed of 38 centimeters per second, was almost eight times slower. Together with the narrow width of the track, this excluded direct competition in sound quality with vinyl records and reel-to-reel tape recorders. Also, the cassette was designed to accommodate only two heads, eliminating the use of separate heads for recording and playback, and monitoring from the tape, which was typical for reel-to-reel tape recorders. How, with such glaring shortcomings, did cassettes and cassette recorders quickly become the most popular format in the world? Early cassette recorders found their buyers among announcers and journalists, because they were equipped with built-in microphones and automatic recording level control. This made them convenient for recording speech and conducting interviews. For recording music, the cassette was completely unsuitable. The sound quality was much inferior to other popular media of the time. A year later, in the United States, under the patronage of Phillips, the same cassette was released under the Norelco brand. A team of engineers, headed by Dutchman Lou Ottens, was made up of specialists from Holland and Belgium, working in Hasselt, Belgium. Philips didn't stop there and came up with a device for playing and recording cassettes - the Philips Typ EL 3300. The history of cassette tape recorders has its roots in the innovations and successes of Philips, which, under the Norelco brand, released the first cassette tape recorders in North America. In 1964, Philips introduced the Norelco EL 3301, also known as the Norelco Carry-Corder 150, which became the first cassette tape recorder released in the United States. This device was a significant step in the development of portable audio systems, giving users the ability to record and play audio on compact cassettes. Video material prepared with the help of AI