I found these photos on-line.
I still have these and they still work.
I would
bounce transfer 4 tracks to a stereo VCR and then
back to 2 tracks of the Yamaha leaving me two tracks
to record and then bounce back to the VCR and then
back to the 4 track as completed.
That gave me 5 stereo parts IF I didn't record during a transfer
with making only 4 transfers which was much better than
bouncing tracks within the 4 track.
The less bouncing/transfers the better, no doubt.
I did some stuff for radio air-play that turned out very good.
I wasn't sure how it should be mixed for however they were boosting
so I supplied three mixes to them and my first mix was the one(s) used...lucky guess
on my part.
When I started using a PC I was still using this- with an updated drum machine
so I could input cassette, turntable, radio or my instruments. It was nice
having the selections and mixing options.
It has a very nice patch bay with selectable options.
I would "screw-up" the drum metering and volumes of different parts of the drum
patterns to get a more "humanized" drum part. Little changes were very effective for that.
The output from the PC routed back into the 4-track.
The output of the 4-track went to a Pioneer power amp (which I still have)
that went to Canon speakers ( an ESS subsidiary).
I could record anything from the inputs of the 4-track or output of the PC.

post edited by spacey - 2013/10/24 08:45:33