T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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935.1 | Not intellectually pleasing, though! | ACORN::BAILEY | Ultrix--Live Free and Die | Sat Sep 05 1987 01:25 | 3 |
| Wasting a lot of bandwidth. Do you save your sequences beside your
favorite movies?
|
935.2 | VCR is cheaper | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Sep 08 1987 10:11 | 21 |
| Actually, videotape can be less expensive than audio cassette.
I record in Beta III onto L750 tape that I never pay more than $4
for. This gives me 3.5 hours at $4.
I pay about $2.50 for my C-90s. It takes 2 1/3 C-90s to store
what I can store on one L750.
So cost of 3.5 hours:
Beta L750 approx. $4
Cassette approx $6
On VHS Hifi you can pack 6 hours onto that $4 tape, but I'm not
sure what happens to the audio quality in the slowest VHS speed.
On Beta, there isn't much difference between Beta II and Beta III.
The COMMUSIC III tape is being mastered on a Beta HIFI VCR.
db
|
935.3 | | BARNUM::RHODES | | Wed Sep 09 1987 09:25 | 4 |
| Now how about comparing the cost of a Hi-fi VCR to the cost of Edd's
$40 data dump cassette deck from Radio Shack...
Todd.
|
935.4 | Of course, indexing is a small problem... | JAWS::COTE | Note stuck? Try Kawai... | Wed Sep 09 1987 09:43 | 8 |
| To be fair, we must include the $3.00 for the chrome cassette I
save all the data on. I'm still on the first cassette and must have
100's of sequences (with short 'voice overs' preceeding them) on
the one tape.
It may not be fast but it's cheap as hell...
Edd
|
935.5 | It slices, it dices,... | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Sep 09 1987 10:25 | 7 |
| Does your $40 cassette also give you the 'added value' of watching
movies in HiFi?
I didn't buy my VCR for the sole purpose of making audio recordings.
That was just gravy.
db
|
935.6 | Oh yeah!!! Well!! Take this Beta-breath!!!! | JAWS::COTE | Note stuck? Try Kawai... | Wed Sep 09 1987 10:34 | 5 |
| Nope, ya got me there Dave...
...but can you put your VCR in your hip-pocket???
Edd :^)
|
935.7 | Shooting from the hip pocket | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Sep 09 1987 11:27 | 6 |
| Nope, but then I can't fit my ESQ-1 in my hip-pocket either.
Given that, I think I'd be better off with a $30 walkman than with
a $40 data dumper.
db who-has-a-$40-radio-shack-data-dumper-for-his-RZ-1
|
935.8 | S/N problems? | POOL::VINSEL | she took my bowling ball too | Thu Jan 28 1988 10:13 | 6 |
| I know this is an old topic, but I seem to recall that the VHS-HIFI
had some problems. I'm not positive on this but I think the S/N
ratios are pretty bad. I know the dynamic range is real high (>85
db). Any comments?
pcv
|
935.9 | | 16631::MOELLER | Hear me now or hear me later | Thu Jan 28 1988 11:53 | 5 |
| I'm also looking around for a quality stereo mixdown medium, and
have been considering VHS Hifi.. anyone out there with any input
for us ??
karl
|
935.10 | DAT's De Answer | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Jan 28 1988 13:37 | 11 |
| Wait for DAT.
Write to Walter Yetnikoff, president of CBS Records, and tell him
that if they do that stupid copy code thing you'll never buy another
CBS record.
As far as I know, the S/N for VHS HiFi approaches CD quality. I
have not heard any rumblings about poor S/N.
len.
|
935.11 | You might want to consider a Beta Hi-Fi | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Thu Jan 28 1988 14:05 | 17 |
| If all you're looking to use this thing as is a mixdown medium,
I would recommend Beta Hi-Fi over VHS Hi-Fi. Beta Hi-Fi starts
at around $300, maybe less if you look hard.
There is one VHS Hi-Fi VCR that can occasionally be found in that
price range, the Emerson VCS 966. I have one. In general, all
the low end VHS HiFi's I've heard have had unacceptable levels of
noise for a mastering deck. You should listen for yourself.
Anyway, for a decent VHS Hi-Fi deck, you should expect to pay around
$700. The Beta Hi-Fi's are fairly good throughout the price range.
However, if you are also going to use this as a VCR, in most cases
you'll want the VHS over the Beta. The key problem with Beta is
that its very hard to find places that rent Beta tapes.
db - who also frequents the VIDEO notesfile
|
935.12 | the GAP gap | SALSA::MOELLER | Waiting for GooDAT | Thu Jan 28 1988 15:53 | 24 |
| Those of you that know me know that my thing is cassette albums.
I'm working on another, should be very nice when done.. my setup
includes two good but old Nak cassette dex with Dol'B' only,
a Fostex (how tired you are of hearing about it!) and an old TEAC
3340 in nice shape. Also an excellent old TEAC Dolby outboard unit.
I'd like to make a sequenced mixdown master for cassette dups..
I balk at buying a half-track, though it could be spliced to properly
sequence the pieces, because it's a single-purpose machine with
a limited future. DAT isn't here yet and is bound to be $$$$.
A VCR might give the S/N ratio I need, but it's not spliceable
(is that a word?)..
A question about mixing to VCR (any flavor).. I understand that
unlike audio decks, VCR's take a few seconds to come up to speed
and to switch into record mode.. true ? I'm concerned about the
time gap between pieces on the tape, remember this will be the
duplication master (or source for a dup master) for cassette albums,
and the time/space between pieces can screw up the timing for
an album side.
Any comments on switching in/out of record mode on a VCR ?
thanks. karl
|
935.13 | Use the PAUSE button. | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Exit left to Funway | Thu Jan 28 1988 16:37 | 23 |
| It takes a few seconds to load the tape and spin up the heads from
the STOP state of a VCR.
However, if you START/RECORD, record silence for a few seconds, and
then PAUSE, the tape stays wrapped around the drum and the heads
continue to spin. It takes only a tenth of a second or so for the tape
to come up to record speed out of PAUSE. Consider- when you pause
the tape while recording a show for your tapelibrary, how long does
it take to stop/start it with the pause button?
Note- you should not stay in the PAUSE state longer than absolutely
necessary, as tape and head wear will occur. A few minutes is fine.
Most decks will automatically drop out of PAUSE into STOP long before
the tape or heads take any significant damage.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
I heard a rumor that SONY (manufacturers of DAT machhines) bought
CBS Records from CBS Inc. recently (and hence is now Zitnikoff's
boss). Any confirmation? (and yes, I have no respect whatsoever
toward Zitnikoff, nor any person who works for Zitnikoff, having
dealt with him and his underlings. _Spinal_Tap_ was accurate satire.)
|
935.14 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Waiting for GooDAT | Thu Jan 28 1988 16:44 | 4 |
| re .13 thanx Bill.
re Sony-CBS rumor.. yes, Sony DID buy CBS. DAT notch chip futures
uncertain.. film at 11
|
935.15 | DAT's Enough For Me | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Jan 28 1988 17:14 | 13 |
| Yes, Sony has bought CBS Records (not CBS), but has said publically that
they will allow CBS Records full independence. That sounds as if
they're taking a "hands off" approach regarding the DAT/copycode
"controversy", but I'm hard pressed to believe they'd let a wholly
owned subsidiary dictate to them about technology. CBS can go ahead
and notch their product, as long as the machines don't have those
damned chips in them.
What *really* irks me is that "artists" like Quincy Jones have come
out in support of copycode chips.
len.
|
935.16 | No problem | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Thu Jan 28 1988 17:25 | 23 |
| Karl,
This ain't a problem. Commusic III was mastered on a VCR. Did
you hear any problems at the beginning of songs?
What I did is press record/play and immediately hit pause before
the tape moved at all. Then I turned on the cassette player and
'unpaused' the VCR about 2 seconds before the music came on. This
was plenty of time to get the tape moving.
This was done on a Sony SL-2700 (Beta). I'm pretty sure (but 100%
sure) that you can do this and get it to work right for just about
any VCR.
Assuming you can live with gaps at least as long as a second or
two, there's no problem. If you're trying to do very fine edits,
you can't do this pratically with a normal deck. There are decks
with editing features that allow this though. They run into the
bigger bucks obviously, but I don't think you'll need that.
db
|
935.17 | good so far ! | SALSA::MOELLER | Waiting for GooDAT | Thu Jan 28 1988 17:35 | 12 |
| thanks, Bill and Dave.
It sounds like the record/pause/go sequence allows a predictable
intertune gap.. like deterministic.. sounds fine.
Any fine editing would be done on 8track.. except if in the middle
of a piece would screw up any MIDI sync track.. ah well, another
topic.
Next: frontend PCM unit or direct to HiFi VCR ???
karl.. 80 degrees here today Sun fans !
|
935.18 | First the egg, then the chicken | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Thu Jan 28 1988 17:39 | 8 |
| Some of the Sony's (mine for example) have a PCM adaptor builtin
to the back of the unit.
Seems to me that once you have the VCR, you can make the PCM decision
separately without loss of investment providing that you get a
VCR that can be used with PCM (I don't know what that entails).
db
|
935.20 | VHS works fine. | FROST::HARRIMAN | with real glycerine vibraphone | Fri Jan 29 1988 08:46 | 25 |
|
re: .all
I, too, use a VHS HIFI for mastering. I have had no problems
with noise except for the obvious things like making sure the tracking
is aligned, I'm not overloading a channel somewhere, etc. The VHS
has higher s/n and headroom in general (by a LONG shot) from my
Portastudio II which mixes down to it. Comments about the pause/record
are true; however, beware that most pause buttons only let you pause
for five minutes max - it beats on the heads.
I would have chosen Beta, if it was more popular. However, I
mixed agendas when I bought the deck. I wanted a VCR, and I wanted
a mastering deck. Rather than spend 500+ bucks on a decent VCR,
and 800+ bucks for a marginally decent mastering deck, I went for
the 800 bucks and bought a reasonably good VCR. Beta is almost
nonexistent around here, the known universe having committed to
VHS. I read recently that even Sony will be marketing VHS decks
(made by Sansui I think) soon.
Certainly, it works, and works well. Use good tape, though,
I experimented with different types and found that, as in most
recording applications, cheap tape doesn't work as well.
/pjh
|
935.21 | I wanna hear the master some day! | HPSTEK::RHODES | | Fri Jan 29 1988 09:31 | 6 |
| Someone told me recently that a VHS HIFI deck + PCM adapter exceeds the
cost of a grey market DAT deck. If this is actually the case Karl,
then you can pick up a DAT deck and use it not only for mastering, but also
for distribution (some day we'll all have DAT decks).
Todd.
|
935.22 | Go a head Len, make my dya ;-) | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Fri Jan 29 1988 09:43 | 5 |
| Todd is write, I didn't want to sya it butt it wood seam like bying
in to PCM at this time, mite be a reel mistake. Bettor off weighting
for DAT, which seems an inevicability rite now.
db
|
935.23 | Whats the application... | CCYLON::ANDERSON | | Fri Jan 29 1988 10:06 | 9 |
| PCM/VCR combo has some advantages over DAT in certain applications.
For example, After making your stereo master in PCM you may use
the two normal audio tracks for device control such as MIDI or slide
projectors say for a mulit-media show. In fact depending on the
control systems you devise the possibilities ate almost endless.
But, if all you want is quality stereo wait for DAT.
Jim
|
935.24 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Waiting for GooDAT | Fri Jan 29 1988 11:37 | 15 |
| re 'grey market DAT'.. Todd, here in Tucson there is certainly a
black market (being so close to Mexico) - it'd be easier to
score major consumables than a DAT recorder.
Re waiting for GooDAT.. I smell 2 years before they're readily
available, with or without notch filter..
I'm now a bit confused on the PCM/VCR combo. I hear that Beta HiFi
is better overall than VHS HiFi, and some folks say mastering directly
to VHS HiFi is fine, but then I hear you need a PCM frontend. I
have a friend with BOTH a Beta HiFi AND a PCM frontend.. CD quality
for sure. He says it's "fine without PCM" ... then why'd he buy
it ?
thanks for your kahnd support, karl
|
935.26 | PCM = Hi-Fi | NIMBUS::DAVIS | | Fri Jan 29 1988 17:12 | 18 |
| My group just finished doing some recording with a borrowed PCM/Beta
setup. Very high quality sound indeed. The difference btween PCM and
straight VCR, I believe, is that the PCM converts analog audio to
digital signals (the connection from PCM to Beta is only a single wire,
not stereo), where the Beta deck records a more normal audio signal (no
A/D/A conversion). PCMs are expensive, over $1000 last I heard. I also
heard rumors a while ago that Sony wasn't going to make the home
version any longer, not enough of a market.
A friend did an A-B comparsion for me around Christmas time, of
his CD against CDs recorded to his hi-fi VCR (VHS format). I couldn't
tell the difference on casual listening. He claimed that he could
detect a bit of difference in the high end on the VCR, but not much.
I think the biggest drawback to using a VCR as a matering deck would
be the inablity to edit. Otherwise, a great idea.
Rob
|
935.27 | This may be the Commusic VCR of choice | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Mon Feb 01 1988 16:16 | 11 |
| Karl,
Just found out that there's a VHS VCR that comes with builtin
PCM. It's the Toshiba DX-900 and it sells for a typical hi-end
VCR price, just under a grand. I'm also told that it performs
about as well as a typical hi-end VCR.
So from what I hear it is NOT a cheap VCR with PCM. Or put another
way, you get a very good VCR plus PCM at apparently no extra cost.
db
|
935.28 | Stay away from Toshiba... | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Exit left to Funway | Mon Feb 01 1988 18:02 | 19 |
| Problem specific to the DX-900 :
You can't use it in real-time to record WGBX (TV 44 boston,
a channel that sometimes puts the PCM over the video channel).
Whenever you punch it into PCM mode, it drops into TAPE PLAY.
(or so the note in the CD notesfile says). If you aren't into
listening to GBX, this is a moot point.
Problem generic to Toshiba products:
If congresscritters decide to go thru with barring all Toshiba products
for 2 years (because Toshiba machine tool Inc. sold submarine propeller
machining equipment to the Soviets), you will NOT be able to get repair
parts for your recorder. Nada. Nothing.
That ALONE makes me refuse to buy anything that says "Toshiba"
unless it's a throwaway (it breaks, I throw it away. CD players
are a good example).
|
935.29 | Waiting is not necessarily buying futures | HPSTEK::RHODES | | Tue Feb 02 1988 09:22 | 6 |
| Just read in EE Times that Casio is going to market a DAT player in
one east coast city and one west coast city of the USA this spring.
Knowing Casio, the price should be right. One of the many companies slated
to introduce DAT players in the US this spring, copy code or not.
Todd.
|