SCT-7500 (140-0668) Tape and Cassette Deck Tips Faxback Doc. # 7804 The following tips can help you get the best performance and the longest life from your cassette deck. ERASING TAPES Each time you make a recording, the previous recording on the tape is erased. You can reuse a tape for new recordings as many times as you wish. If you want to erase a tape without making a new recording, set the RECORD LEVEL controls to 0, and press RECORD. To completely erase the tape, let it run to the end. You can also erase an entire tape (both sides) in a few seconds with a bulk tape eraser, available at your Radio Shack store. ERASURE PROTECTION Each cassette has two tabs that protect it from accidental erasure. One tab is for Side A and the other is for Side B. If you break off a tab, the cassette deck cannot record on that side of the tape. If you want to record on the tape after removing the tab, cover the hole with a piece of adhesive tape. NOTE: Removing the tabs does not prevent a tape from being erased by a bulk tape eraser. CLEANING After repeated use, dust, lint, and tape oxides can accumulate on your cassette deck's tape-handling mechanisms. For best performance and sound quality, clean the tape heads and pinch roller after about every 20 hours of use. Use recorder cleaner and cleaning swabs, or a convenient head cleaner cassette. Your Radio Shack store has a complete selection of cleaning supplies to choose from. TAPE TENSION If you have used a particular cassette a number of times, the tape can become too tightly wound on either hub. A tape that is wound too tightly can cause distorted recording and playback. Before using the cassette again, restore the normal tension by fast-forwarding through the entire cassette and then completely rewinding it. DEMAGNETIZING After about 20 hours of use, the cassette deck's heads accumulate residual magnetism. Tape heads that have not been demagnetized have poor frequency response and can damage your recordings. To avoid these problems, we recommend that you use a demagnetizer to demagnetize the heads. Your local Radio Shack store carries a suitable demagnetizer. WARNINGS: Do not attempt to demagnetize the erase head. Never touch the record head with a metal object. (ALL-10/5/94)