Greetings: For more than 30 years I used reel to reel machines as the primary source(s) for my DJ work. They were heavy, so reliable and sounded great. Many times I had two or even three of them running on the table during a wedding or party. I never took a single record or turntable out of the house, despite having over 10K records at one point. I custom recorded 7 1/2" reels and carried about 75 to every gig. I was very fast at mixing with them, often cuing up requests on one deck while another finished a song. My Dad owned a TEAC A-1500 that served me well for years but it quit working and this week I completely re-configured his two systems. All three of his tape machines had stopped due to the belts being worthless. I fixed his Carver at his house, replacing the main belt in about an hour but his Yamaha cassette and TEAC reel came back to my shop for further surgery. The Yamaha is ready to go back but his decision was to return the old reel machine to me along with the tapes. I spent the day yesterday with my two grandsons tearing it down and replacing the rubber. I t works just as good as ever and sounds fantastic. That machine must be more than 40 years old. I think I will sell my TEAC X-7R MkII. Jim