A cassette demagnetizer is a device that removes the magnetic field that accumulates during the use of audio cassettes in cassette decks.[1][2]

A Maxell HE-44 cassette type demagnetizer

The passage of magnetically charged tape over the metallic parts of the tape deck imparts a magnetic polarity that can reduce fidelity in recording and playback. Demagnetizers (also called degaussers) remove this polarity.[citation needed]

Demagnetizers of the cassette type resemble cassettes and contain circuitry to demagnetize tape heads. Demagnetizers of the wand type demagnetize anything that they touch, including tape heads and capstans. The wand's advantage lies in its demagnetizing other metal parts of the tape path, not just the heads. Used carelessly, it can increase the magnetization of the heads; if used too close to tapes, it can erase them. Both of these types of demagnetizer contain electronic circuitry and require a power source (either a battery or a power cord).[citation needed]

A third design consists of a cassette shell with a head cleaning tape wound on the spools and a magnetic disc mounted above the head cleaner tape. When the deck "plays" the cassette, the tape cleans the heads and simultaneously the magnet rotates, creating the alternating magnetic field required for demagnetizing.[citation needed]

Some cassette decks demagnetize themselves. These work by feeding the record head a high-frequency signal, whose amplitude is great at first and then is reduced to zero over a few seconds.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ Søgaard, V. (1975). Everything You Need to Know for a Cassette Ministry: Cassettes in the Context of a Total Christian Communication Program. Bethany Fellowship, Incorporated. ISBN 978-0-87123-125-3. Retrieved 2 Nov 2024.
  2. ^ Popular Science. Bonnier Corporation. p. 144. ISSN 0161-7370. Retrieved 2 Nov 2024.