Reel to reel repair - is it worth it?


Inherited a Teac X-3 reel-to-reel from my father, along with some tapes he had recorded. In anticipation of getting it, I even bought some more pre-recorded tapes off Ebay. After I got the Teac home, I found it didn't work (reel won't engage when "play" is pushed). Only repairman in town gave $150 estimate. Is this reel-to-reel worth $150 to repair? Hate to just throw it in the trash as it has sentimental value. Even though I have no experience with these kinds of repairs, is this something I should try to repair? I can take apart anything. Fixing it and putting it back together again is another story. Any thoughts?
rockyboy

Showing 1 response by jazzerdave

I've seen my dad do complete rebuilds on Teac, Revox, Studer, and Tandbergs. I'm not without my own skill, but I'd don't think I'd ever want to repair a reel-to-reel myself. I'll agree that they can sound excellent when they're running properly.

Good luck