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-   -   All gone walkies (https://www.audiobanter.co.uk/uk-rec-audio-general-audio/2141-all-gone-walkies.html)

Roy August 21st 04 01:50 PM

All gone walkies
 

"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Roy roy wrote:
I regularly used to flick from source to monitor when recording on my
Nakamichi 582 and was always pretty staggered at how little difference
there was. Subjectively, there didn't seem any difference to the top

end.

One of the main problems with cassettes relates to azimuth errors - from a
variety of reasons including the tape itself. You don't get these - or
shouldn't - when off tape monitoring. Same with the Dolby encoding.


Also bear in mind the Nak had (easily) adjustable azimuth, bias and Dolby
"level".

I still kick myself sometimes for selling it.


You'll get far better performance from a MiniDisc at a fraction of the
price. And those don't vary from machine to machine.


Oh, I know, or indeed my Mac iBook. But I did like the Nak.

Roy.



Fleetie August 21st 04 08:35 PM

All gone walkies
 
I regularly used to flick from source to monitor when recording on my
Nakamichi 582 and was always pretty staggered at how little difference there
was. Subjectively, there didn't seem any difference to the top end.


Well ok, but when I initially dissed cassette's poor treble, it
was in the context of Walkmans. They do have crap treble, and
worse yet, since the tape being played won't have been recorded on the
Walkman, there is the problem of head azimuth differences between
the recording and playback machines, too.

Tape Walkmans were naff compared to what we have now. End of.


Martin
--
M.A.Poyser Tel.: 07967 110890
Manchester, U.K. http://www.fleetie.demon.co.uk




Fleetie August 21st 04 08:36 PM

All gone walkies
 
Oh, and another thing.. many walkmans were not optimally aligned (IME)
out of the box and would drift anyway.. so Dolby wouldn't track
properly (dulling the sound). I used to keep a small screwdriver
handy..


So did I.



Triffid August 21st 04 11:00 PM

All gone walkies
 
Dave Plowman (News) pibbled:
In article ,
Paul Dormer wrote:
*Most* cassettes don't go anywhere near 14kHz in practice. On a new
machine with good tape when measured, yes. After a few years use, no.


I just pulled out a 15 year old Denon deck that's been gathering dust
for the last 10, gave it a clean, demagnetized the heads.. I don't
hear anything like the deteroriation you're talking about.


I once spent considerable time going through cassettes sent in by the
public of which some would subsequently be broadcast. And the majority had
azimuth and dolby errors. Even before the tape type and quality was
considered.

Of course they are capable of half decent performance, but not in practice
for the majority.



Jewellers screwdriver. Sorted. Your problem was??

--
Despite appearances, it is still legal to put sugar on cornflakes.
Strawberries are purely optional.



Fleetie August 22nd 04 03:19 AM

All gone walkies
 
"Paul Dormer" wrote
"Fleetie" emitted :

I regularly used to flick from source to monitor when recording on my
Nakamichi 582 and was always pretty staggered at how little difference there
was. Subjectively, there didn't seem any difference to the top end.


Well ok, but when I initially dissed cassette's poor treble, it
was in the context of Walkmans. They do have crap treble, and
worse yet, since the tape being played won't have been recorded on the
Walkman, there is the problem of head azimuth differences between
the recording and playback machines, too.

Tape Walkmans were naff compared to what we have now. End of.


No, you are wrong. Some of them were very good. 'End of.' x 1000


Thank goodness we have a sense of humour here.



Dave Plowman (News) August 22nd 04 09:23 AM

All gone walkies
 
In article ,
Triffid wrote:
Of course they are capable of half decent performance, but not in
practice for the majority.



Jewellers screwdriver. Sorted. Your problem was??


I don't have a problem - I have a very expensive test tape for setting
azimuth correctly afterwards. Doubt many do, though.

--
*Can fat people go skinny-dipping?

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.

Roy August 22nd 04 10:07 AM

All gone walkies
 

"Fleetie" wrote in message
...
I regularly used to flick from source to monitor when recording on my
Nakamichi 582 and was always pretty staggered at how little difference

there
was. Subjectively, there didn't seem any difference to the top end.


Well ok, but when I initially dissed cassette's poor treble, it
was in the context of Walkmans. They do have crap treble, and
worse yet, since the tape being played won't have been recorded on the
Walkman, there is the problem of head azimuth differences between
the recording and playback machines, too.

Tape Walkmans were naff compared to what we have now.


Ah, well. I do still have a Walkman Pro.

Roy.



Fleetie August 22nd 04 01:59 PM

All gone walkies
 
Ah, well. I do still have a Walkman Pro.

Well don't worry, it's nothing a bridge and a river can't cure. ;-)




Chris Isbell August 22nd 04 02:02 PM

All gone walkies
 
On 19 Aug 2004 01:11:33 -0700, (Paul Edwards)
wrote:

A couple of weeks ago I decided to replace my old Aiwa personal
cassette player (batteries had leaked - my fault). Easy, I thought -
I'll just nip into town and have a look in John Lewis and buy
something neat for £40 or so.

[snip]

So if you are thinking of replacing that old Walkman DO IT NOW! By
the end of the year it will be too late.


Page 862 of the current Argos catalogue (autumn-winter 2004) lists ten
such devices from three pounds up to fifty-five pounds. The following
pages have about the same number of flash memory "MP3" players, five
hard disk players (taking the three iMac variations as a single player
type) and four mini disc players.


--
Chris Isbell
Southampton, UK

Tim S Kemp August 22nd 04 03:42 PM

All gone walkies
 
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article ,
Triffid wrote:
Of course they are capable of half decent performance, but not in
practice for the majority.



Jewellers screwdriver. Sorted. Your problem was??


I don't have a problem - I have a very expensive test tape for setting
azimuth correctly afterwards. Doubt many do, though.


I've got one somewhere - like my tape deck it's not been used for a while -
also has a little strobe wheel in the middle for speed setting.
--
Mr. West, not every situation requires your patented approach of shoot
first, shoot later, shoot some more and then when everybody's dead try
to ask a question or two




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