Memorex dB - 1993 - US
"A bonafide Super Ferric. It performed superbly, took a lot of signal and a very underrated cassette" Tony Villa. See the video below for a full review.
This magnetic tape is very dark, shinny, very smooth and very well cut. Exceptional good looking cassette too. Made in China and made well. Everything about it screams quality. Tony Villa suspects this may have been excess super-ferric inventory put onto to this cassette with a highly cobalt-doped formula for an extremely dark Type I tape. It is easy to agree as this tape is exceptionally dark when compared to any other type I tape of the same price range. A high quality and bonafide "super-ferric" tape for 80-90% less when compared to the popular expensive super-ferrics. Stock is dwindling and they are increasingly more difficult to find. A cassette that CassetteComeback has no trouble endorsing.
NOTE 1: 60 Minutes: B-Grade. These are not... B-Grade. They're a bit more scuffed than the other "box-fresh & clean" stock we have. They're just easier to let go at a lower price...
NOTE 2: 90 Minutes: B-Grade. Same as above... and these too can barely be considered B-Grade. Just some blemishes on the wrappers and one tape has a 3cm hairline crack on the case on the reverse side that is insignificant. Again, just easier to let these go for a lower price.
Note 3: 60 Minutes: Box-fresh cassettes with practically no blemishes worthy of mentioning, if at all. Few available.
Note 4: 90 Minutes: Box-fresh cassettes with practically no blemishes worthy of mentioning, if at all. Few available.
About Memorex:
Established in 1961 in Silicon Valley, Memorex started by selling computer tapes, then added other media such as disk packs. The company then expanded into disk drives and other peripheral equipment for IBM mainframes. During the 1970s and into the early 1980s Memorex was worldwide one of the largest independent suppliers of disk drives and communications controllers to users of IBM-compatible mainframes, as well as media for computer uses and consumers.
Memorex entered the consumer media business in 1971 and started the ad campaign, first with its "shattering glass" advertisements and then with a series of famous television commercials featuring Ella Fitzgerald. In the commercials she would sing a note that shattered a glass while being recorded to a Memorex audio cassette. The tape was played back and the recording also broke the glass, asking "Is it live, or is it Memorex?" This would become the company slogan which was used in a series of advertisements released through 1970s and 1980s.
Over time the Memorex consumer brand has been owned by Tandy, Handy Holdings, Imation and as of 2016 Digital Products International (DPI)[5]. Today, Memorex is a brand for consumer electronics and accessories such as portable audio players, iPod accessories, flat panel TVs, Blu-ray Disc players, flash drives, CDs and DVDs.
Memorex dB - 1993 - US