





Have you EVER used your cassette tape deck?
oh...hey...i almost forgot i even got a cassette deck behind the little screen...haha...thanks for reminding me...
A friend with a ML320 drove for a year until I showed her there was a cassette deck behind that huge screen.
for me, i just don't use the cassette anymore...
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Brought back a lot of old memories. But I miss my CD's in the car, and the other features of CD players.
MB really missed the mark without an in-dash CD player.
Smoky
Last edited by Smoky; Aug 1, 2002 at 11:53 AM.
It's ear-bending. I guess I've been away too long. Reminds me of why I left in the first place.When shopping for a Benz stateside I found they keep up the bad practice. So I opted for the Bose system thinking that "that's *gotta* come with a CD-player!" The car I ended up with didn't have Bose (an option that can be omitted as I can see from the posts here...) but everything else I wanted - orion-blue C7 panorama 6-speed charcoal cloth. So the Bose money went towards the CD-changer. Still wish I had an in-dash player for those impulse moments where you just want to pop in a new CD to hear that one song.
I keep a tape with French-Caribbean Zouk in the car for my wife's sake, but otherwise just open the cassette door to demonstrate the feature. It get's a few ooh's and aah's...
Conservative-a$$ Germans...compact-cassette...tsk tsk. Gone the way of the 8-track.
I did quite a lot of driving, and the radio stations in Germany are just like you expect - oompa-paah

BT
Currently, I'm listening to some sensitivity training tapes to help me be more tolerant of those who turn their $35K MBs into $50K Hondas, and to better understand why some people think that Music since 1994 is worth listening to.
(Just being a bad boy tonight.)
Currently, I'm listening to some sensitivity training tapes to help me be more tolerant of those who turn their $35K MBs into $50K Hondas,
I did have to file a small notch in the faceplate door's corner for the cable to come out of the faceplate (without pinching the cable). You'd never see if I didn't point it out. I then hid the cable by wedging it around the edge of the audio and climate control panels, and into the ashtray area - there I connect whatever device I'm wanting to use. The awia has this cool cradle that recharges it, and it happens to fit in the empty panel below the radio - it looks like it was made for the car!.
So for me - the cassette was the best decision they could have made (unless they had included a 'line-in' since I like using my laptop's audio for books). Second best would be to have a 6 cd-changer that supports mp3 discs (most will play cdr, but only if audio files - mp3 is 11 times more efficient, and 1 regular cd holds over 10 of my favorite cds).
The other day, my 13year old found a cassette tape in a drawer, and asked what it was! He of course has mp3 cd players. I don't think he's ever hear music from vinyll!
Last edited by galaxygrrl; Jul 29, 2002 at 12:46 AM.
Books on tape during long drives. Listened to the unabridged version of the Godfather on the way to Yosemite a few weeks ago -- book is better than the movie!
thats usually the case galaxygrrl. that is why i usually try to read the book first if a great movie is coming out. and oh yeah, i used my cassette deck..... a few times. whee
If audio fidelity is of ANY importance to you at all, bag the MP3's!!!
EDIT: For information on ".shn" files, see http://www.etree.org
Which models have tape decks. Is this an option you guys are discussing?
Cheers, BT





