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Dual 505 update
On Thu, 12 Mar 2015 21:21:34 -0700 (PDT), Phil Allison
wrote: Johny B Good wrote: I was going to mention the effects of phase shift on the harmonics of a 500Hz squarewave played back from analogue magnetic tape where, despite the oscilloscope display showing it looking nothing like a square wave, it still sounds just like the original squarewave. ** That is not true of the vast majority tape machines which are well capable of reproducing a good square wave at 500Hz. True of any decent cassette deck or R to R and includes Roland tape echo machines as well. My standard test for a Roland 201, 303 and 501 models involves recording a 500Hz square wave and I except to see a good looking result on the scope. Sure you were not thinking of 50Hz? I can't recall the actual test frequencies used, possibly but 50Hz seems rather on the low side to me. I reckoned 500Hz as being not to high to limit the odd harmonic content unduly in the tape playback. Certainly when it came to preserving the waveshape when recording such mid frequency (circa 2.4KHz at standard cassette speed) 'squarish waveforms' in a Bi-Phase Manchester coded digital stream, a phase compensation filter was required before the recording amp to preserve some modicum of the original waveshape in order to aid reliable detection of the zero crossings required to successfully decode the data stream. Also the trick, when dubbing copies from a master tape, of playing the master and slave recorders in reverse to cancel the effect of the phase shifts, largely restoring the waveshape back to a semblence of 'squareness'. ** Very hard tobeiev it worked or was in any way necessary. Well, I guess the concern was that dubbing a source already "afflicted" by such phase 'distortion' would accumulate to the point of becoming an audible, if subtle, effect. The idea being that using such a technique would improve the second generation copies by cancelling out this particular form of 'distortion'. As to whether it was really necessary seems to be a moot point other than to dedicated "Hi-Fi Purists" looking to minimise any and _all_ distortions in their recordings. Since you needed two machines capable of such reversed direction playback and recording (or machines that could be modified to do so with bulk erased tape allowing the erase head to be defeated), this was yet another experiment I (and doubtless the majority of others similarly interested) didn't try to repeat. I guess the phase shift sensitivity reference Trevor is thinking of is in relation to stereo detection of the direction of sound sources rather than the percieved quality of the sound by each individual ear. ** For certain. My thought too but I thought it would be a little presumptious of me to claim absolute knowledge of what Trevor was thinking. :-) -- J B Good |
Dual 505 update
Johny B Good wrote:
Another fact, of some importance to analogue tape, is our relatively high tolerance to intermodulation distortion. ** Not one bit true. Even the professional multi-track studio recorders, running at 30 ips could show routine IM distortion levels as high as 30% on master tapes. ** That would be very audible. Now you are just making stuff up. Not me. I was quoting what I learnt from 'learned' articles from either "Hi-Fi Magazine" or "Studio Sounds" magazines I _used_ to subscribe to back in the mid 70s to early 80s. ** But only half remembered, seriously misquoted and missing all the context. Qualifies as " making stuff up ". ..... Phil -- J B Good |
Dual 505 update
Johny B Good wrote:
Also the trick, when dubbing copies from a master tape, of playing the master and slave recorders in reverse to cancel the effect of the phase shifts, largely restoring the waveshape back to a semblence of 'squareness'. ** Very hard to believe it worked or was in any way necessary. Well, I guess the concern was that dubbing a source already "afflicted" by such phase 'distortion' ... ** I do not care for your idiot wild guesses. There is simply NO such effect with any decent quality tape machine. You obviously have NO actual experience with testing tape recorders with square waves. Bugger off. ..... Phil |
Dual 505 update
On Fri, 13 Mar 2015 17:41:39 -0700 (PDT), Phil Allison
wrote: Johny B Good wrote: Also the trick, when dubbing copies from a master tape, of playing the master and slave recorders in reverse to cancel the effect of the phase shifts, largely restoring the waveshape back to a semblence of 'squareness'. ** Very hard to believe it worked or was in any way necessary. Well, I guess the concern was that dubbing a source already "afflicted" by such phase 'distortion' ... ** I do not care for your idiot wild guesses. There is simply NO such effect with any decent quality tape machine. You obviously have NO actual experience with testing tape recorders with square waves. Bugger off. You're "Billy Bass" AICMFP! http://www2.b3ta.com/fish/ -- J B Good |
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