where to buy new blank quality cassette tapes?


I'm sure this has been discussed in the past year or two, so please point me to any threads -- haven't been able to find anything with audiogon's forum search. Some of us still have perfectly functional high-end cassette decks that make great recordings and are more flexible (and arguably higher-rez & better-sounding than a CD recorder). But they need better cassettes than a Maxell UR to sound their best.

I'm certain I haven't looked everywhere, but it seems the closest I can come is Maxell still making UD-XLII, which is a 35 year old tape formulation. Anybody manufacturing and selling high-quality metal tape, or at least the last best type II cassettes??
128x128sdecker

Well thank you all for your responses. I've put all of them to good use. I even had an audiogoner contact me directly with his stash of unused good tape.

Ktrogers: I gave eBay another try. Last time it seemed hawkers were treating sealed cassettes from the '80s as ancient artifacts worthy to start bidding on as an heirloom for $30+. But if you keep looking you find some people who are offering NOS tape at very reasonable prices. I picked up a few there. Amazon is a better source it seems.

Johnz: I in fact ordered a couple SM-60 tapes to try, they seem like they're rebadged TDK SA from the '70s but I'll hear how they record shortly. Much better than Maxell UR, but probably on par with XLII? BTW I can still pick up a 5-pack of XLII anywhere for ~$7.50 which is a very good deal. Even if it isn't the world's greatest tape it still sounds more than acceptable with a good deck. I doubt the formulation has gone unchanged since the 70s! Maxell customer service had no clue.

Blueranger: Actually my last stash of tape was a case of Maxell MX-S (their top metal tape) from a locally-owned electronics shop at their cost in the small city I live in. Little did I know then that was the last run of MX-S, I thought the store had just abandoned them. In future travels I'll stop in small town stores and hope to be as lucky.

Mosin: I have been in touch with Alan who is shipping me several Sony UX Pro to see how they sound, with the option of buying many more. Fairly priced and a good source.

So it seems like cassettes are like vacuum tubes, the best are no longer made (ie no metal tapes anymore) though you can still buy adequate stuff new (ie Electro-Harmonix tubes). But you generally have to pay dearly for the best NOS tape as it slowly disappears.

Unlike the increasing demand for tubes, there is certainly a diminishing demand for good cassette tape, but I stand by my claim that a good tape in a final-gen high-end cassette deck is a more flexible recording media than anything except perhaps DAT or MD, and arguably better-sounding.
Hi,

There is a guy named Alan Williams - sales@tapeline.info - in Ireland who has some of the best cassette tapes anyplace. He takes PayPal, his prices are right, his shipping is fast and well done, and he can be trusted. Some of the better ones he has were made by Sony. They are the Sony Metal C90 XR IV, the Sony metal SR 100 and the sleeper tape of all is the Sony UX PRO 90, a chrome pro tape which is surprisingly good. My brother bought a quantity of these tapes from him, and he was very pleased overall. His deck is a Nakamichi Dragon. I mention it so that you will know he at least has equipment good enough to voice a decent opinion.
This is what you might do like I did. Go find a small town 15-30k and see if there any old style music stores. You just might find a treasure chest like I did. TDK MA's, SA-XG's, SA_X's Sony SR's plus other various. I found 300 plus!! It was a find of a lifetime. So if you want, try a little hunting. Hope this helps. Mike
I think you can still buy TDK Professional SM-60 type II blank tapes at the Guitar Center online store. About $25 for a 10-pack. Not as high-end as TDK's metal formula cassettes of yesteryear, but still much better than Maxell UR's..
I am not aware of anyone making high quality cassette tape. Unless you are luck and can find NOS tapes at an Audio Store your best bet is ebay. Be prepared for sticker shock though