Once a common sight in Radio stations around the world, the NAB Cartridge machine or Fidelipac was used for short jingles and announcements, sometimes even for longer recordings. Using a similar sized cartridge to a domestic 8 track machine the NAB cartridge was different in that the pinch roller was not in the cartridge but would hinge up in the player and hold the tape against the capstan. Running at 7.5 inches per second (ips) compared to 3.75 ips in domestic cart machines the recording and reproduction quality good be very good but it was the ease of use and cueing ability offered by these machines that made them so useful in broadcasting.
We have Sonifex cart machines that while very well built do have rubber parts that will degrade over time and reduce the transport performance. Luckily we have some of the last remaining stock of new pinch rollers, motors and capstan drive belts.
The pinch roller in one of our machines had become quite hard and the rubber shiney over time. A pinch roller in this state may not hold the tape as securely and could also have flat spots both leading to increased wow and flutter and poor tape handling. These pinch rollers also have high quality cartridge bearings pressed into their shell. Over time these loose their lubrication, wear, become rough feeling and will also add to poor tape handling.
Older, fragile and valuable tape must be handled and used carefully. A ‘chewed’ tape caused by a poorly maintained tape transport in any tape machine, audio or video is a disaster and hard to recover from perfectly.
Both halves of the cart machine case need to be removed to easily change the pinch roller. While the access is good and the machine, in this case a Sonifex microHS, had been designed for easy servicing the pinch roller is still a little fiddly to get to so I removed the transport from the main chassis.
To remove the pinch roller a small slightly hidden C clip must be removed you can see in the image above the slot machined into the roller shaft where it sits and holds the roller. This is hard to remove as the plastic bush on top of the roller stops you getting a small screwdriver in. I managed to remove the C clip with some fine circlip pliers. Be careful not to loose the clip if you don’t have spares, they fly away very easily!
Now the new roller can be placed on the shaft. It’s a good idea once all the transport is out to give everything a good clean with IPA.
On this machine, the castan drive belt was quite slack so a new one was fitted, which is easy now the transport is removed. First though the capstan flywheel and motor pulley were cleaned of all the old rubber belt residue that tends to accumulate over time.
The last thing to do is check the pinch roller pressure. This is important to as to high or too low will increase wow and flutter, increase wear to the bearings and capstan surface and give poor tape handling. Due to the design of these NAB cart machines, the pinch pressure needs to be checked with a special cartridge. The pinch pressure is then adjusted from a screw pot on the top PCB seen outlined below in green.
That’s it, time to play carts again.
That was a very interesting read about the pinch roller replacement ! I wonder if anybody could help me with a problem I am having with my Sonifex machines. I have 3 machines.. One is a Record/Play unit and two are PlayOnly units. The Record/Play unit has a ‘noise reduction switch’ that removes a hissing sound. This hissing sound is quite bad when it’s switched off. But when it’s switched ON, the sound quality is superb ! However, with my two Play Only units, the hissing sound is there all the time, as I cannot find any sort of noise reduction switch (the circuit boards on the Record/Play unit is completely different than that of the Play Only units. It is definitely NOT caused by the heads being out of alignment…. they are in perfect position. When a cart is NOT being played (in the Play Only unit) the hissing noise is there when the slider/fader on the mixing desk is pushed up. So it is clearly something to do with its circuit board ! When the noise reduction switch is turned OFF in the Record/Play unit, the hissing noise is exactly the same as that of the Play Only units. So there simply has to be a noise reduction switch on the circuit board of the Play Only units, but as I said, the circuit boards are completely different. Would anybody know where this noise reduction switch is located on the Play Only unit ? I would be most grateful for any advice ! Thank you for reading this !
I may well need a new pinch roller, but I have not got that far yet. Firstly I am not entirely sure what the model number of my unit is. I am pretty sure it is made by sonifex, at least that is what I believed in 1977. It is branded by Roger Squire as a S3000 MkII. On opening it up the belt was completely perished and came apart in my hand. Anyone have an idea how I can identify the unit and get a new belt?
Hello… I have two concerns and am really hoping you can help me. I have three Sonifex Cart Machines. One is the record/play module and the other two are play only. When I play my carts in either of the play only machines, there is a terrible hissing sound, which is not present in the record/play module. There is a noise reduction switch on the circuit board of the record/play module, but I cannot find one on the play only machine’s. Their circuit boards are much simpler and less packed with parts, but I still cannot find a noise reduction switch. Do you know if they have one as well, and if so, where is it located. My other problem is the belt on the wheel of one machine which keeps flying off. Why should this happen. And if it’s due to old age, do you have any belts available. I would be so very grateful for your advice and assistance. Yours sincerely, Dermot Redmond email redmondjdermot@googlemail.com
Hi,
I have a roger squire S3000 jingle machine, I have no idea what it is used for nor whether it works, does it have any value or should I just bin it?
Regards
Hi Darius
Thanks for your comment – it sounds like you have a NAB broadcast cartridge machine, commonly used in radio stations to play short jingles and announcements. Some of these have a value to owners of cartridges but some are more fragile and difficult to repair than others. I’m not familiar with this model. Can you post a picture or send one to adrian@thegreatbear.net?
Hi from Chris.
Anyone got Manuals for micro C.Q.R Nab recorder and player.Mine has just stoped recording,Plays O/K.
If you know it can have life, put into the old girl,point me in the right direction.
Thanks in advance
Has anyone got a sonifex cart machine for sale
Hi Russ
Thanks for your comment – I’m afraid we don’t have any NAB carts or machines for sale at the moment.
Thanks
Adrian
Hi Russ,
If you are still looking for Sonifex players. I just bough a couple of Micro HS Stereo players.
Contact me for more info.
Regards,
Martijn
Hi, Marti.
I’d like to buy a Sonifex recorder or player. Do you still have them?
I’m from Spain.
Thanks,
Francesc
Hi Francesc,
Unfortunately we don’t have any Sonifex cart machines fo sale..
Thanks
Are you still looking for Sonifex Cart player(s) ?
Hi Adrian, do you have a source of these pinch rollers?
Hi Richard
Thanks for your comment – I think we bought these back in 2011 from an eBay seller who I don’t think sells online anymore but does trade from this website:
http://www.taperecorder.co.uk/
If they don’t have any spares available, I’d recommend having your pinch roller rebuilt by Terry at http://www.terrysrubberrollers.com/ – his work is excellent.
Adrian
Hi,
I have a Sonifex CQ-R record module, but no CQ cart machine. However, I do have a number of HSX cart machines of which only one is a recorder. Is it as all possible to convert one of the others to use the CQ-R module and add a record head to it to make it a recorder?
Also, is anyone still making cart parts or selling the lubricated tape? I’m thinking replacement head pads etc. I have some carts which people have DIY’d some pads but they have quickly become a sticky mess and just caused problems.
Great to find you guys still dealing with all this stuff – the NAB format has a certain something that makes me love it – even though a little VX17 WAV board player could do the job a lot better for under £5 – where’s the magic in that!!!
Alan T
Sorry, I meant to add an answer relating to some very old comments from 2012 and 2015 about the Roger Squires cart machines.
We had one of those on our Squires disco unit in the 1970s. It played NAB carts but it was an odd beast; the pinch roller was engaged to the motor shaft as soon as you put the cart into it, but the motor started up only when you pressed the “play” button, so the carts had to be recorded with about a second of silence at the start of each spot. If I played carts recorded for my Spotmaster 405 on it, you got a horrible startup wow. It definitely was a Sonifex unit, but I suspect it was a cost engineered version that they did for the disco market. Never saw any of them except on Squires disco units, so maybe they didn’t sell well? Never seen any for sale in modern times either, so I guess most of them are in landfill now. 8-(