
AEG/Telefunken Magnetophon M302
AEG/Telefunken
Germany

Tape Deck Details
Number of Motors
1
Number of Heads
2
Head Configuration
Half-track-mono
Wow & Flutter
0.25%
Signal-to-Noise [dB]
45
Dimensions [mm]
280 × 80 × 280
Weight [kg]
4
Year built
1968–1972
Head Composition
Permalloy
Equalization
IEC
Frequency Response
60 Hz – 12,000–14,000 Hz
Speed
3¾
Max Reel [inch]
5
Tracks
1/2 Rec/PB
Price
User
Consumer
Additional Information
The AEG-Telefunken Magnetophon M302 (also known as Magnetophon 302 or M 302) is a late 1960s to early 1970s consumer mono reel-to-reel tape recorder, produced approximately 1968–1972 (manufactured in Germany by Telefunken under the AEG-Telefunken brand after the 1967 merger). It was an entry-to-mid-range model in the Magnetophon line, designed as a compact, portable, and affordable mono recorder for home use, dictation, or basic recording tasks (radio, microphone). The M302 emphasized simplicity, battery/AC operation, and reliability in a small form factor—typical of late-1960s consumer portables before stereo and higher-end models became dominant.
This was a half-track (2-track) mono recorder (some listings confirm quarter-track mono compatibility), focused on convenience rather than hi-fi performance.
Key Technical Specifications
Recording/Playback System — Half-track (2-track) mono; records/plays in one direction (tape flip for reverse); mono compatible; basic overdub possible.
Tape Speeds — Single speed:3¾ ips (9.5 cm/s)
Reel Size — Up to 5 inches (13 cm) diameter (compact for portability; some units accept 7" with care).
Frequency Response (approximate):At 9.5 cm/s: 60 Hz – 12,000–14,000 Hz (±3 dB) Adequate for voice, speech, and basic music on small reels.
Wow & Flutter — Approximately 0.25–0.35% weighted at 9.5 cm/s (typical for portable single-motor design).
Signal-to-Noise Ratio — Better than 45 dB (standard for mid-1960s transistor mono portable).
Heads — 2 heads: combined record/playback (permalloy) + erase head.
Drive System — Single motor (synchronous or induction type); belt or idler mechanism; mechanical brakes; fast wind/rewind.
Electronics — Fully transistorized (typically 8–10 transistors); printed circuit board amplifier.
Amplification & Speakers — Built-in mono amplifier; internal permanent magnet dynamic loudspeaker (elliptical or round); output power ~0.5–1 W (personal monitoring).
Inputs —Microphone (low-level).
Radio/line/pick-up (higher level).
DIN-style connectors.
Outputs —Line out.
Internal speaker.
Headphones possible.
Power — Batteries (typically 6 × 1.5 V = 9 V) or external AC adapter/charger; also car adapter compatible in some configs.
Build & Dimensions — Compact portable metal/plastic case; approx. 280 × 80 × 280 mm (11 × 3.1 × 11 inches); weight ~3–4 kg (lightweight and portable).
Manufacturing — Germany (Telefunken/AEG-Telefunken).
Performance & Legacy Context
The Magnetophon M302 was a practical mid-1960s/early 1970s portable mono deck—offering single-speed operation, transistor reliability, and battery/AC flexibility for field, travel, or home use. It delivered decent clarity for voice/journalism, dictation, or basic music dubbing at 3¾ ips on small reels, with acceptable dynamics for its intended purpose. As a mono portable, it prioritized convenience and portability over hi-fi stereo performance.
Common issues today: Belt/idler hardening, dried electrolytic capacitors, transistor aging, dirty heads, mechanical wear (especially on portable transport), and battery compartment corrosion (if stored with old cells). Restorations are straightforward—many units revive well for vintage portable mono use. Service manuals available (Radiomuseum, Elektrotanya—German originals with schematics and alignment).
Compared to siblings:
Magnetophon 300 series — Compact mono portables (M300/M302 as entry-level models).
Higher models (e.g., M207/M230/M250) — Stereo, three-head, three-speed.
M302 — Battery-powered mono portable with single-speed focus.