Learn how to fix and preserve broken cassette cases and tape.
If you have had any experience with cassettes, you know a tape can get caught in the inner workings of the cassette player or get bound up. When you have one-of-a-kind information stored on the tape, it becomes imperative to try and fix the tape and salvage the information. A broken tape or case can be repaired, though you’ll need a little grit and ingenuity.
Table of Contents
ToggleStep by Step Instructions for Replacing A Broken Case
1. Purchase a new cassette with a shell held together with small screws. Alternatively, you can buy a cassette shell from an electronics store.
2. Carefully remove the screws from the new cassette and lift the top off.
3. If the broken cassette case was held together by screws, do the same thing with that case. If it’s glued together, carefully separate the two halves by prying them apart with a screwdriver and working it around the edges of the case seams.
4. Remove the tape reels from the new cassette after carefully noticing how the tape is threaded.
5. Carefully transfer the reels of tape from the damaged cassette box to the new one, making sure that you thread the old tape the same way that the new tape was threaded.
6. Replace the top of the new cassette shell and screw it together after checking to make sure the tape reel didn’t get pinched.
Step by Step Instructions for Fixing A Broken Tape
1. Purchase a cassette-tape splicing kit from an electronics store. The only way to fix a broken or damaged tape is by splicing it.
2. If the tape is still intact, but one section is stretched or damaged, use a pencil to pull the damaged tape section from the case carefully.
3. If the tape has snapped, open the cassette case to access the broken ends of the tape. If your original cassette box is held together with screws, you’ll be able to reuse it. Otherwise, follow steps 1 through 4 under “Replacing a broken case.”
4. Follow the instructions that came with your tape-splicing kit to remove the damaged ends of the tape and splice the tape back together.
5. Rethread the tape and replace the case top if you removed it. If you had to break apart a glued case, follow steps 5 and 6 under “Replacing a broken case” for transferring the tape to a new case.
Overall Tips & Warnings for Cassette Tapes
1. Cassette tapes won’t last forever, even if they are carefully stored. Ten years is asking a lot of most tapes.
2. Recordings that you want to preserve longer should be copied to new tapes or, even better, to CD-R media.
3. Any repaired cassette is liable to break again, so make a copy of the material you’ve stored on it as soon as possible
Other Articles on BeginMyStory.com about Preservation
- How to Clean vinyl records
- How to care for magnetic media (Reels, Cartridges and Cassettes)
- How to Fix Broken Cassette Cases and Tape
- Step-by-step Instructions for Maintaining a Cassette Deck
- Why Historians and Genealogists Digitize Research and Heritage
- How to Buy Blank Cassettes for Recording
- Tips on How to Keep Personal Digital Audio Recordings
- Digital Image and Folder Naming Strategy for Preservation
- Scanning Digital Images for Genealogy Preservation
- How to Preserve Family Archives (papers and photographs)