The Reel-to-Reel Tape Brands That Audiophiles Refuse to Let Die

Revox. Ampex. Tandberg. Akai. Teac. Five companies that built the machines that recorded most of the second half of the twentieth century — and not one of them still makes reel-to-reel tape decks.

The Revox A77 sold over 450,000 units between 1967 and 1977. Ampex Model 200 serial numbers 1 and 2 were used to record Bing Crosby’s radio show in 1948. Les Paul modified one and invented multitrack recording within a year. Akai’s GX glass crystal head was guaranteed for 100,000 hours of continuous use — more than eleven years of nonstop playback.

In 2026, the format is technically extinct. There is also an active global community of audiophiles, professional restorers, and master-tape labels who refuse to let it die. Blank tape still costs $30 a reel. Pristine Revox A77s sell for over $2,000. And once you have heard properly aligned 15 inch-per-second tape playback, the rest of recorded music starts to sound thin.