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Seller's Description

Voll Funktionsfähig gebraucht aber im gutem Zustand

Our Thoughts RADAR AI

This is an ambitious ask: €220 is on the high side for a used cassette deck unless this TEAC is a notably rare or top-tier model in confirmed excellent shape. Without a firm model ID and condition details, it’s hard to benchmark precisely, but for a mainstream used deck this price usually wants to be closer to the upper end of the market only if it’s serviced and fully working.

That said, TEAC decks are often well-built, with solid transport performance and good tape handling when healthy, so a clean example can still be worthwhile. The big buy-before-you-bid question is service history: belts, idlers, head wear, speed stability, and whether playback/recording are both verified. If it comes with original paperwork, remote, or has documented maintenance, that helps; otherwise I’d treat €220 as a premium ask rather than an easy buy.

Independent perspective — not a price guarantee. Always verify condition, accessories and provenance before purchase.

About TEAC

TEAC Corporation stands as a pillar of Japanese audio engineering, founded in August 1953 by Katsuma Tani, a former aeronautics engineer with an uncompromising vision for sound reproduction. The company emerged from the merger of two entities—the Tokyo Television Acoustic Company (1953) and the Tokyo Electro-Acoustic Company (1956)—consolidating under the TEAC name in 1964. From its inception, TEAC pursued a singular mission: to deliver authentic sound to music enthusiasts through technically superior products, a philosophy that has guided seven decades of innovation.

TEAC built its reputation primarily on magnetic recording equipment, establishing dominance in open-reel tape decks and cassette machines throughout the 1960s and beyond. The company's flagship TD-102 stereo tape recorder, launched in April 1957, gained international recognition and set the standard for the industry. Beyond tape machines, TEAC expanded into turntables, CD players, and digital audio components, while simultaneously establishing TASCAM in 1971 as its professional recording subsidiary—a brand that became synonymous with studio-grade equipment worldwide.

Today, TEAC occupies a distinctive position bridging vintage collectibility and contemporary hi-fi. The brand commands respect among analog enthusiasts and professional engineers for its legacy of precision engineering, while its modern Esoteric line serves the high-end market. TEAC products appeal to discerning buyers who value heritage, build quality, and sonic authenticity over mass-market appeal, positioning the brand as a respected mid-to-premium player with particular strength among those seeking vintage and analog-focused solutions.

See all TEAC listings on RADAR.

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