Wish your streaming music sounded more analog? Someone made a Bluetooth-to-cassette live converter, and it’s very cool

  • YouTube Julius Makes creates a Bluetooth-to-tape live converter
  • Adds instant analogue crunch to streaming music playlists
  • It’s just a one-off

Here’s something we (sadly?) won’t see at CES 2026, but that I love: YouTuber Julius Makes has created a device to offer “Bluetooth streaming on real cassette tape”. It’s a one-off bit of fun rather than something you can buy, but for people of a certain era, it might be tempting if were a real product.

He explains the full process in the video below (via Hackaday), but it works by receiving the Bluetooth signal and converting it to analogue like any of the best Bluetooth speakers or best wireless headphones, except then it sends the analogue signal to a tape head and writes the sound to a short length of cassette tape.

The tape loops through to a second tape head to play it back immediately, either on the (suitably tinny) built-in speaker, or through the headphone jack. Now you’ve got the authentic compressed analogue cassette sound – in fact, you can decide to distort the signal on the way through, if you want to get nasty with it.

The creator himself says that this is essentially “a tape delay with extra steps” – but it’s less about the function, and more about the style of it – including the fact that he added a giant glowing VU meter that’s nearly the length of the whole thing.

For an at-home project (albeit a fancy one), it’s a very cool-looking piece of tech, in my opinion. You’ve got the classic tape-player controls that looks like piano keys on one end, plus that huge futuristic VU meter up the side, the cassette body as part of it, and the flashes of orange, which is very in for hi-fi right now – just see the Kanto Ren or Audioengine A2+ speakers.

Julius says that he could have made the tape section more compact, but he wanted to show the mechanism – to have the tape running outside of the cassette body with visible brackets – and I think he’s right to do it. That’s half the fun!

The device has a volume dial for its output from the tape, but it also has a recording volume dial, so you can record what level is at when it’s written to the tape, and you can crank this up to distort the sound if you want to ‘distress’ your music on its way through the streaming-to-old-school-analogue pipeline.

The whole exercise is frivolous in some ways, but there’s a specificity to the sound of old formats that’s fun to add back into your music. That’s part of why the best turntables have stayed popular in the last few years, and the vinyl revival hasn’t turned out to be a fad.

Sure, you could buy something like the Fiio CP13 or the We Are Rewind GB-001 boombox, but then you’d have to buy tapes too. This solves that! For better or worse.

Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!

And of course you can also follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.

Read more @ TechRadar

Latest posts

Blue Origin successfully reused its New Glenn rocket

Liftoff. | Anadolu via Getty Images Today's launch of AST SpaceMobile's BlueBird 7 satellite aboard Blue Origin's reusable New Glenn rocket was a partial success....

The NSA is reportedly using Anthropic’s new model Mythos

Despite the months-long feud between Anthropic and the Pentagon, the National Security Agency is using the AI company's new Mythos Preview, according to Axios,...

Sources: ‘Fitbit Air’ is a screen-less Whoop competitor debuting with ‘Google Health’ subscription

At the end of March, Google started teasing a screen-less Fitbit band. 9to5Google can now report that this device will be marketed as the...

Cloud development platform Vercel was hacked

Vercel, a major development platform that hosts and deploys web apps, was compromised, and the hackers are attempting to sell stolen data. A person...

Tesla is rolling out its Robotaxi service to Dallas and Houston

Tesla is expanding its Robotaxi footprint across Texas by introducing availability in both Dallas and Houston. As announced in a post on X, the...

The next Mac Studio and MacBook Pro releases could be postponed by several months

Anyone looking to upgrade to the next Mac Studio or MacBook Pro might have to wait a little longer, thanks to the ongoing global...

Palantir posted a manifesto that reads like the ramblings of a comic book villain

In case you haven't gotten around to reading Palantir CEO Alex Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska's 2025 book, The Technological Republic, (because why would...

Beijing’s robot half-marathon is back for its second year with far less embarassing results

To make up for an incredibly laughable inaugural event, Beijing is running back its humanoid robot half-marathon. Fortunately, the event that pits humanoid robots...

What do you want Google’s ‘Pixel Glow’ lights to do?

We reported earlier this week that Google is working on a laptop revival, as well as new “Pixel Glow” lights that would be coming...

Gemini Live redesign replaces fullscreen interface on Android

Visually, Gemini Live has remained mostly unchanged since launch, but Google is now testing a redesign that removes the fullscreen interface on Android. Read more...