Author Topic: Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck  (Read 21635 times)

OldiesButGoodies

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Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck
« on: February 18, 2013, 03:01:39 PM »
I took the Pioneer RT-707 to Anders for service and adjustments and borrowed this Akai to test (and write a short review of here). 

It is an Akai GX-4000D from the 70s.  I put in one of my reference RTR recordings of Dave Brubeck to see how it sounded, but could not figure out how to adjust the speed.  It sounded good, but slow.  I kept pressing what I thought was the speed button, thinking it was malfunctioning.  After scratching my head for a while, I downloaded the manual from hifiengine and figured out that the speed is determined by the size of the capstan pulley.  An adapter is stored behind the tape head cover - alas in this one the adapter is nowhere to be found (it is probably at the store). The button I was pressing only changes the eq (not very intuitive, Akai engineers). With the adapter unavailable I moved on to recording a test tape at the slower speed.  I spun Winston Marsalis' Black Codes and let the machine do its thing at 3-3/4 ips.  I played back the tape and it sounded… ok - not great but not bad - definitely better than any inexpensive cassette tape deck.  I then cleaned the heads (went through two cue tips) and demagnetized,  and things improved significantly.   

Note that this is a very bare bones deck, no autoreverse and you can probably have two beers while it slowly rewinds a full tape - but it does the audio job well. It has an "SOS" button that I then  decided to test to see what it did (never mind the instruction manual - which I ignored),  thinking it added some form of noise reduction.  It doesn't.  It stands for Sound On Sound, so I guess it shuts down current to the erase heads so you can do sound overlays.  The same stuff we do so easily today in Garageband or Audacity was actually a pain back then (thank you computers). So that recording ended up a blurry mix of Winston Marsalis and the next record I spun, some steel band from the 60s. 

My overall impression is that this is a great RTR (specially if you have the adapter and can record at he higher speed for additional fidelity).  The controls are the opposite of "soft touch" - but in exchange it feels more reliable - a deck you can count on when you want to watch reels turning. 

Here are some pictures: 















Offline MacGeek

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Re: Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck
« Reply #1 on: February 18, 2013, 04:57:17 PM »
I found a great way to clean R to R heads is with a new, white shoe lace-the finer the weave, the better.  Wet the lace with tape head cleaner, thread it through the tape guides (as if threading a tape for playback) and gently push/pull it through the guides until no more crud is removed.  This may take more than one shot, with new, clean sections of the shoe lace, or a second lace if needed).  This method cleans the heads, all tape guides and can even clean the capstan and pinch roller if put in the play mode with the power off.
Mac stuff, Sony HDR-F1HD AM/FM/HD tuner, Denon DRS 810 cassette, Denon CDR-W1500 CD recorder, Music Hall MMF-9 w/B&O MMC2, B & O 4002 w/B & O 20 CL, Revox A-77

Offline Sir Thrift-a-Lot

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Re: Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck
« Reply #2 on: February 18, 2013, 10:44:02 PM »
Careful what you put on pinch rollers.   I found out the hard way.

Offline schwarcw

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Re: Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck
« Reply #3 on: February 18, 2013, 11:41:44 PM »
Love Reel to Reels!

Good write up Pepe!!



Carl

SunnyDaze

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Re: Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck
« Reply #4 on: February 19, 2013, 01:55:58 AM »
It's not easy to tell in the photo, but, are those 10 inch reels Pepe? I was wondering why you had an R2R on your desk in the system photos!

I think it'd be cool to find a stand alone Dolby B (or even possibly C, or even more rare, S) unit and see how much of an improvement it'd have on sound quality in addition to the stand alone unit to increase the speed!

Very neat.

Offline MacGeek

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Re: Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck
« Reply #5 on: February 19, 2013, 07:09:39 AM »
Carl,

That is one pretty machine.

Per the specs sheet for my Revox A77, Dolby B improves the S/N ratio by 4 db
Mac stuff, Sony HDR-F1HD AM/FM/HD tuner, Denon DRS 810 cassette, Denon CDR-W1500 CD recorder, Music Hall MMF-9 w/B&O MMC2, B & O 4002 w/B & O 20 CL, Revox A-77

Offline Reverend

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Re: Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck
« Reply #6 on: February 19, 2013, 08:04:15 AM »
Very cool Pepe, Love R to R's.

OldiesButGoodies

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Re: Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck
« Reply #7 on: February 19, 2013, 12:45:48 PM »
@SD - the last version of the Akai, the GX-4000DB replaced the SOS button with Dolby (B I guess?) noise reduction (and hid the SOS button under the recording level knob).   

@Carl - Like others have said - what a beautiful deck,  need to drop by and see it

bmwr75

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Re: Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck
« Reply #8 on: February 19, 2013, 05:07:52 PM »
I have the exact same model.  Traded a friend a couple of small speakers for it.  He bought it new back in the 70s.

SunnyDaze

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Re: Review - Akai GX-4000D Reel to Reel Deck
« Reply #9 on: February 19, 2013, 10:41:32 PM »
Robin Trower on the Akai sounds solid through the DQ's, Scott!