Uher (brand)
Uher was a German brand of electronic equipment currently owned and licensed by Assmann Electronics of Bad Homburg.
The manufacturer Uher Werke was based in Munich, Germany, and is probably best known for its former range of portable reel-to-reel tape recorders which were once widely used by professionals in areas such as reporting and film-making. Since digital equipment has become widespread, these older analogue recording machines are no longer produced. Two parts of the Uher company still exist, one which has focused on informatics, and ATIS Uher focused on IT security.
The Uher model 5000 was a centerpiece in the Nixon White House tapes scandal, when 18.5 minutes of recordings were purported to be inadvertently erased.
Report series
Report 4000 series
Introduced in 1961, the "Report 4000" series of portables had a neat, compact design, about 11" wide, 10" deep, and 4" thick. They used 5" reels of tape, and came in three models:- Report 4000 - two-track mono, later four-track mono
- Report 4200 - two-track stereo, usable also as two-track mono
- Report 4400 - four-track stereo, usable also as four-track mono
About one million Report 4000 were produced. The Report were built until 1999.
Other series
Based upon the mechanical design and chassis of the 4000 series recorders Uher also offered the professional- Report 1000
- Report 1200 Synchro
The final model of the Report series was the Report 6000 introduced in 1986. They featured a more modern three-motor design and electronic control.
Shared specs
All the Report recorders had small loudspeakers built into them, at various times either in the front, or on the top near the piano-key-style controls.They had several sources of power:
- Mains power, using an internal fitting power transformer;
- Internal rechargeable dry-fit battery: both nickel-cadmium and gel lead acid were available
- Five standard D-sized batteries.
- External power via a range of power adapters for automotive power.