T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2588.1 | *I* buy 25mz-386 computers to run Wordstar! :) | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Wed Mar 06 1991 08:23 | 10 |
| You're missing the point, Len. DAT (aside from music professionals) is
for audiophiles who have *for long time* invested in inaudible quality
gains. The audiophile standard is whether the physicists can measure a
difference; the ears are irrelevant.
It's the same logic that causes people to buy 300ZX sports cars capable
of three times the speed limit -- the appeal has little to do with
functionality :).
JMHO - Hoyt
|
2588.2 | If you can't hear it you must be deaf! :^) | WEFXEM::COTE | Drive slow. I'm watching... | Wed Mar 06 1991 08:44 | 7 |
| Methinks you got the audiophiles' raison d'etre bass-ackwards, Hoyt.
Specs are irrelevant, only the ears matter. Why else would scribbling
on your CDs with green magic marker or hiding little pieces of
aluminum foil in your laundry room gain any acceptance?
Edd
|
2588.3 | Kell Ur A Teel? | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:15 | 15 |
| Wow: "raison d'etre"?! Some who owes dried grapes? :)
I think that $9000 stereo "systems" and green magic-markers *might* be
two different crowds... and to the extent they're the same, it's
because "64 times over-sampled" and green magic-marker are variations
on the same thing -- mystic uncomprehensible alchemy.
Another analogy is the Freudians versus the behaviorists: the former
say that the latter "only cure the symptoms." The human mind seems to
have a disposition toward things too murky to understand (or hear).
Folk would rather spend $110/hour discussing the implications of their
synapses flashing during sleep (i.e. dreams). Then drive home fast,
listening to green-circled CDs en route (<- French-alert!).
- Hoyt (behaviorist with a $500 stereo and 11-year-old Buick... and 2 386s)
|
2588.4 | I'll probably get the new Tascam DAT... | FULCRM::PICKETT | David - Who Fed Roger Ebert? | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:22 | 14 |
| Len, YOU own a 300Z, don't you?.... ;^)
I was ejected from the Internet High-End Audio distribution list for
picking on audiophiles who spent two days arguing over the 'coloring'
of different sets of 'matched' tubes from the same manufacturer. This
gentleman was extatic because he had 'dared' to mix un-matched tube
sets, and had found 'the ideal soundstage'. I just happened to mention
using something called a spectral analyzer, hoping he could quantify
his results, and whammo, I was banned for heresy. I now bear the
scarlet letter 'A' for Audiophilistine.
dp
me and Hester, we be mates... ;^)
|
2588.5 | Markers & Fools, oops Foils | UTROP1::BOVENJ | | Wed Mar 06 1991 10:54 | 11 |
|
Edd,
I must have missed out on something here... I know I won't be able to
sleep if you don't reveal the secrets of the Green Magic (indeed!)
Marker, not to mention the no doubt amazing effects of hidden aluminum
foil...
Mr. mod, don't route me to another conf please...
Jeroen
|
2588.6 | | WEFXEM::COTE | Drive slow. I'm watching... | Wed Mar 06 1991 11:01 | 8 |
| Without going into too much detail, painting the edges of CDs
and placing bits of aluminum foil in strategic positions in your
listening room have been offered as ways to increase fidelity.
Some audiophiles claim to hear differences when these techniques
are applied. I've no doubt that they do.
Edd
|
2588.7 | Another technique? | TLE::TLET8::ASHFORTH | The Lord is my light | Wed Mar 06 1991 11:04 | 2 |
| Chastity belts help increase fidelity as well...don't know how you hook them
up to your amp, though-
|
2588.8 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Do Vulcans give 'high threes' ? | Wed Mar 06 1991 11:54 | 4 |
| uh, "What's 'SCMS',", he said. It's cool that repeated A-D, D-A
conversions don't hose the signals too badly.. but what's SCMS ?
karl
|
2588.9 | Pronounce It "Scums" 8^) 8^) | IXION::ROST | The Andy Fraser of central MA? | Wed Mar 06 1991 13:54 | 7 |
| "Serial Copy Management System"....prevents digital copying from a
copy of a digital source (including your own master tapes, for
instance). Included on all US sold DAT machines intended for
"consumer" use (as opposed to pro use), like the Sony machine in all
the dept. stores for $799.
Brian
|
2588.10 | Colour of Spring | UTROP1::BOVENJ | | Thu Mar 07 1991 10:02 | 8 |
|
RE:.6
Edd, used the marker on John Lee Hooker, fidelity changed instantly
from blues to greens,
dankjewel (that's thanks in my lingo)
Jeroen
|
2588.11 | DAT's the way it is in America | KORG::MISKINIS | | Mon Mar 11 1991 22:39 | 8 |
| Huh? DAT won't copy DIS but may copy DAT?
I'm pretty ignorant concerning DAT recording... Is there really a
mechanism preventing you from backing up your CDs onto a DAT recorder
that you buy?
_John_
|
2588.12 | Fair use is OK... | DCSVAX::COTE | cat man du? | Tue Mar 12 1991 06:30 | 7 |
| > BAcking up CDs...
No, the SCMS is designed to prevent you from making *digital* copies
of your *digital* copies of your CDs. (i.e. The 3rd generation must
be analog.)
Edd
|
2588.13 | | PROTO2::FISHER | Pursuing an untamed ornothoid | Tue Mar 12 1991 12:14 | 5 |
| Just out of curiosity, when you say "Digital Copies", do you mean that you
actually transfer the numbers directly from a CD to a DAT? Do any extant
CD players have digital output?
Burns
|
2588.14 | | DCSVAX::COTE | cat man du? | Tue Mar 12 1991 12:37 | 3 |
| Yes, and yes, although I have no make/model info.
Edd
|
2588.15 | DAT's the way it is in America (cont.) | KORG::MISKINIS | | Tue Mar 12 1991 12:46 | 14 |
|
Hi,
Sony has at least one model with direct digital output. I looked
at it about a year ago, as I was curious. I don't remember if it was
coax or fiber optic...
It had some blurb saying something to the extent of "for support of
future devices that will provide digital to digital transfer...".
Hmmm.. It was a while ago...
_John_
|
2588.16 | Really Possible? | MIDIOT::POWERS | I Dream of Wires - G. Numan | Tue Mar 12 1991 14:28 | 8 |
|
Please correct me if I'm wrong. -
I didn't think that direct digital CD OUT to digital DAT IN would work
because of the different sampling rates of the two mediums. Are you sure
that the direct connection will work?
Bill Powers
|
2588.17 | Yes, If You Buy A Pro Unit (which won;t have SCMS either!) | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Tue Mar 12 1991 15:43 | 5 |
| While "consumer" DAT recorders are not allowed to sample at 44.1 KHz,
the pro machines can.
len.
|
2588.18 | Lock the door on an empty room? | DCSVAX::COTE | cat < man | du | Tue Mar 12 1991 15:46 | 6 |
| Huh? Now I be confused... Consumer DATs must have SCMS, but can't use
44.1khz sampling rate?
Can they use 88.2?
Edd
|
2588.19 | Recordable CD's? | TRAM::BBOLDT | | Tue Mar 12 1991 16:14 | 7 |
| Has anybody heard anything lately about recordable CD's? The last time
I heard anything was over a year ago. At that time Tandy was
supposedly working on developing one. It seems to me that if they can
come up with this DAT will not become that popular.
Byron
|
2588.20 | | STROKR::DEHAHN | No time for moderation | Wed Mar 13 1991 08:20 | 5 |
|
Akai has one...for 14 grand.
CdH
|
2588.21 | And Charge A Toll As Well | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Wed Mar 13 1991 09:32 | 13 |
| re .18 - right, that's my understanding - consumer DAT's can't sample
at 44.1KHz, and must implement SCMS. Go figure. The sample rates
supported are 32KHz and 48KHz.
Note that SCMS prevents digital "pirating" of DATs themselves. BFD.
It also means that DAT copies of CDs made via the analog ports can't
be digitally duplicated at the 2nd generation.
Nobody claimed the RIAA's being rational about DAT piracy. Note that
they're still going for the blank tape tax as well!
len.
|
2588.22 | Can't touch DAT | MAJTOM::ROBERT | | Wed Mar 13 1991 09:54 | 17 |
|
re: .19
"... DAT wouldn't become that popular."
Depends. The recordable CD will be a Write Once, Read Many device, whereas
DAT, like other tapes, is re-recordable. Also, the two sampling rates on DATs
allow you to record up to 2 or 4 hours on one tape, whereas the CD I'm assuming
won't allow much more than 1 hour. (yes, I know what happens when I assume...)
Then there's the price. DATs will slowly start coming down a bit. Because
of the technology involved, and I'm not sure what process say Tandy would use
for "burning" the CDs, I can't imagine a recordable CD player coming in at
anything but the VERY high end consumer range. Perhaps that's what's holding
them up... "yeah we can make it, but how do we make it CHEAP enough??"
-TR
|
2588.23 | sampling directly from DAT/CD to keyboard? | DPE::STARR | SRV......I can't believe you're gone.... | Wed Mar 13 1991 10:55 | 8 |
| Not beig real familiar wtih digital samplers and stuff, this may sound like
a niave question, but......
Is the DAT (or CD) digital output compatible in any way with digital samplers?
In other words, could you directly sample a sound from a CD/DAT to your
keyboard??? That would be cool!
alan
|
2588.24 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Born To Be Riled | Wed Mar 13 1991 11:09 | 15 |
| <<< Note 2588.23 by DPE::STARR "SRV......I can't believe you're gone...." >>>
-< sampling directly from DAT/CD to keyboard? >-
>Is the DAT (or CD) digital output compatible in any way with digital samplers?
>In other words, could you directly sample a sound from a CD/DAT to your
>keyboard??? That would be cool!
Two kinds of digital output on this gear; the low-cost 'fiber' solution
that I know little about, mentioned earlier, and a standard developed
by the Audio Engineering Society, the AES/EBU connection standard.
Your DAT/CD and sampler would have to be similarly equipped. Let me
know how it goes.
karl
|
2588.25 | | DPE::STARR | SRV......I can't believe you're gone.... | Wed Mar 13 1991 11:42 | 17 |
| > Your DAT/CD and sampler would have to be similarly equipped.
Hmmmmm...it would be interesting to know if these exist. It would be nice to
be able to directly sample, let's say, the opening bass drum on Led Zeppelin's
"When The Levee Breaks" for your drum sounds! Or directly sample a digital
piano from a DDD recording of one.
There could be a whole new market for sound-effect CDs, with just sounds on
them that people could sample from.....
> Let me know how it goes.
Don't wait for an answer from me! 8^) I don't (and probably won't ever) have
that kind of equipment. But maybe others here might?
alan
_MIDIOT_at_large
|
2588.26 | | DECWIN::FISHER | Pursuing an untamed ornothoid | Wed Mar 13 1991 12:23 | 7 |
| >It would be nice to
>be able to directly sample, let's say, the opening bass drum on Led Zeppelin's
>"When The Levee Breaks" for your drum sounds!
Wait till the RIAA hears about that one!
Burns
|
2588.27 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Wed Mar 13 1991 12:58 | 28 |
| I believe that the reference to the writeable CD is to Thor. It ain't
out yet, even though it was supposed to be out, what, about two years
ago? Anyway ...
Is the big deal about not being able to record digital to digital
all because of the sampling frequencies? I thought there was more to
it than that. If that's all, then I think I would use a technique used
in the video world to sample at, say, 44 kHz from a 41 kHz source.
That is, I'd do linear interpolation between the 41 kHz samples to
generate a signal that could be sampled at any sampling frequency and
would yield very little noticeable error. That's pretty much what is
being done doing D->A->D except that in this process the interpolation
is non-linear and due to the frequency responses of the analog
equipment. This interpolation process could be done in the digital
domain with the interpolated values being calculated for the output
frequency sample points. It'd be an improvement over the process
described in the base note. Once you could do, say, 40 generations of
duplication this way, what would be the point of the protection?
I think the only reason why a technique along these lines won't be
done is because most consumers can't tell the difference even with
current technology. I think the point well taken is that if they were
trying to keep folks from getting great copies from CDs they've already
failed. Now is the time to just watch the price of this stuff drop.
Say, maybe that's why Thor failed ...
Steve
|
2588.28 | | TRAM::BBOLDT | | Wed Mar 13 1991 13:49 | 7 |
| It was my understanding that Tandy was working on a CD that could be
written to over and over. This is why it is taking them so long. They
already have the write once technology. I also heard that they were
supposed to hold almost 6 times as much music as a conventional CD
because of data compression techniques they had come up with.
Byron
|
2588.29 | Tandy and DAT Walkmen | IXION::ROST | Boozoo Chavis lookalike | Wed Mar 13 1991 16:02 | 16 |
| Re: Tandy
They're still busy at this, in fact they are constantly advertising for
engineers to work on it, not necessarily a good sign...
RE: DAT in general
Just saw the Sony DAT Walkman (yep) today, the thing has a power supply
almost as big as the deck. Pretty slick, and yes, it has full digital
I/O as well as analog, plus SCMS. $800 was what the owner told me he
paid, $10 a pop for 2 hr. tapes. Considering that it's portable *and*
it'll blow away any cassette deck you ever heard, well, that's
a reasonable price. Scheming....
Brian
|
2588.30 | | WEFXEM::COTE | cat < man | du | Wed Mar 13 1991 16:29 | 7 |
| Yeah, I'll bet a DAT sounds alot better than a standard cassette when
you use the little condenser mike built into it's case.
Pardon the cynicism, but it would appear that storage medium isn't
that much of a factor in "walkman" type applications. Or is it?
Edd
|
2588.31 | Put A Studio In A Shoebox Dept. | IXION::ROST | Boozoo Chavis lookalike | Wed Mar 13 1991 17:25 | 9 |
| Except the guy was using a couple of nice EV condensors with it; there
is no built-in mike. I expect the mike preamp isn't as clean as the one in
the $2000 portable R-DAT, though. It's a tiny three conductor 1/8"
input, but there's not exactly any room for XLR jacks.
Try fitting a Revox 1/2 track in yer pocket sometime. I'm impressed.
You could sit this thing on the top of your mixing board.
Brian
|
2588.32 | | STROKR::DEHAHN | No time for moderation | Thu Mar 14 1991 08:24 | 6 |
|
It also uses a 180- degree tape wrap, as compared to the 90 degree wrap
in most R-Dat's. Expect shorter head, capstan, and tape life.
CdH
|
2588.33 | I Stand Corrected (Sort Of) | IXION::ROST | Boozoo Chavis lookalike | Thu Mar 14 1991 08:38 | 11 |
| Re: last few
OK, I was wrong, the Walkman DAT is a piece of s**t. 8^) 8^)
Just pointing out that the technology exists to put a digital recorder
into your pocket. I didn't say it was perfect. That costs extra 8^)
Every Deadhead will want one....
Brian
|
2588.34 | | MAJTOM::ROBERT | | Thu Mar 14 1991 11:28 | 20 |
|
Walkman DAT:
I saw the Sony Walkman DAT over in Japan back in November and +almost+
impulse bought it. I had reservations about the fact the doc would all
be in Japanese. (although I'm sure I could have figured out the basic
operation of the thing) Then there was power supply questions, import
duties... (import duties? what's that he asked) Hmmm, being the Jap
model though, it wouldn't had had SCMS! Interesting, the price of it over
there at the current exchange rate came out to about $800, no difference.
EM or Keyboard recently gave it a good review.
Recordable CD:
The fact that it is re-re-re-re-cordable, and held so much more data,
wouldn't that make it incompatible with today's units? That would be
major downfall... unless it had multiple modes of operation, that would
be major cool!
-TR
|
2588.35 | Digital to your Sampler | DWOVAX::ROSENBERG | Damn Good Coffee ... and HOT! | Thu Mar 14 1991 12:03 | 59 |
| RE .23
> Is the DAT (or CD) digital output compatible in any way with digital
> samplers?
> In other words, could you directly sample a sound from a CD/DAT to your
> keyboard??? That would be cool!
Digidesign has it now (for a price). If you have a Macintosh with
at least one slot, and the Digidesign Sound Accelerator Card with a
DAT/IO interface, and a compatable DAT, (and a disk with enough
capacity to store what you want at 10 meg per minute), then you can
move information digitally in real time to and from the DAT to your
harddrive and edit with the Sound Tools package. If you have a CD with
a digital port compatible with your DAT, then you could transfer your
sound from the CD to the DAT first, then use Sound Tools. You can then
move (parts of) this sound to and from your Sampler with programs like
Alchemy, (perhaps Soundtools does this too - I'm not sure). Digidesign
also has its own Sampler on a chip called Sample Cell which connects to
another slot on the Mac, (so you now have exceeded the slots of my IIsi),
which also can load information off the harddrive (if you have Soundtools
and the Accelerator card) allows you to play it back via your Midi
keyboard. Up to 8 meg of samples per card, and I think up to 4 cards
per MAC. (Add another slot per card). Sample Cell does not sample by
itself though. It is a sample player only. However, it also comes with
a CD with tons of samples, but these require a MAC-type CD player and
are encoded in the Sound Designer format (I think). Companies like
Prosonus make these CD's.
Price? Expensive! Just count up the number of parentheses in the last
paragraphy and multiply by megabucks.
Cheapest configuration I could see:
MAC IIsi (~ $3000.00)
Accelerator Card and Soundtools (~$2000)
DAT (~$1500 - $2500)
DISK DRIVE (has to be quick, < 28 millisec) (~$700-$2500)
45 meg - 600 meg
Your sampler and MIDI keyboard.
Cables
(Of course, they have many other product that you would just HAVE
to HAVE, so add another $2000 - $5000).
Still cheaper than a Synclavier, but more expensive than a
Portastudio. I'll tell you what though. This company has got some
great stuff if you want to really get serious about Digital recording.
Looks like they are working with several vendors to put more chips
(GUTS of SGU's and Sound Processors) on the MAC, (like a LEXICON reverb
chip, as well as a Proteus Chip which already exists), and basically
give you a system where rackmounts become these chips, and the MAC
serves as the control panel for all of your units. No MIDI wire mess
either, because you "wire" your chips and software packages via the
MIDI Manager software. And they have a 4-track Digital mixer called
DECK, and Studio Vision, and on and on...
Enough said. I've drooled all over my keyboard . . .
K.R.
|
2588.36 | Alesis Jumps in with a New Format | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Fri Mar 15 1991 10:17 | 22 |
| The Sony "DATman" also got a very good preliminary review recently in one
of the audio mags.
BTW, the latest Keyboard has a teaser about Alesis's NAMM announcement
of "A-DAT", an 8-digital-tracks-on-VHS-cassette system that's
stackable. The basic 8 track module is $4K, and the thing that glues
up to 16 (yes, that's 128 tracks) of them together is $2K. So, 8
tracks - $4K, 16 tracks - $10K, 24 tracks - $14K, etc. Since it's
Alesis, we can be sure it'll be cheap, uh, inexpensive; but will it
work reliably long enough to be worth it? If the mechanicals are just
standard VHS transports and all they're providing is electronics,
maybe...
Gotta wonder how they do this, as Sony gets two tracks of 16 bit
digital via their F-1 PCM adaptor, and Toshiba gets two tracks of
14 bit digital with their DX-900 VHS/HiFi deck.
8 tracks of 16 bits at 44.1KHz is 56.448 Megabits/second of data, which
is about half of what has to actually end up on the tape.
len.
|
2588.37 | | MAJTOM::ROBERT | | Fri Mar 15 1991 12:28 | 2 |
|
D A T A C O M P R E SS I O N?
|
2588.38 | | DCSVAX::COTE | cat < man | du | Mon Mar 18 1991 09:19 | 8 |
| Hey len, did ya see this month's Keyboard story about the DAT box?
You buy 2 channels at a time and can slave multiple boxes together to
expand the number of tracks. Sound familiar?
Announced by Alesis...
Edd
|
2588.39 | Backspace 2 | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Mon Mar 18 1991 09:48 | 6 |
| re .38 - see reply .36
You're not listening, Eddy....
len.
|
2588.40 | I feel so silly... | DCSVAX::COTE | cat < man | du | Mon Mar 18 1991 09:52 | 3 |
| Whoa, where'd that come from???
Edd
|
2588.41 | nice unit- 3 sample rates | AISG::WARNER | It's only work if they make you do it | Mon Mar 18 1991 16:25 | 13 |
| RE: .17 and .21, others:
The DAT Walkman samples at 48 kHz (analog input only), 44.1kHz. and 32
kHz. (32 is special LP mode and is 12 instead of 16 bit, with other
limitations. They push it as for archiving your old LPs, etc.)
It really does sound great -- it even has phantom power! You do have
to deal with the mini-jacks though. I've been using it with two PZM
mics until I get the special stereo mic they designed for it.
There was a great review of it in the latest Electronic Musician. They
didn't even mention that it has a 48kHz sample rate for analog
recording (some of us still record live music).
|
2588.42 | Size seems to be the only win... | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Freddy Krueger Ski Sharpening | Wed Mar 20 1991 14:58 | 12 |
| Gee, for $800 I can buy a VHS deck with stereo HiFi (bandwidth >
20KHz), and a power pack/inverter to run it portably...AND have a bunch
of money left over...
not to mention that my tape costs $8 per 6-hour tape, not $10 for a
2-hour tape...
AND that I can record video at the same time!
[do you get the feeling that I'm a little down on DAT?]
-Bill
|
2588.43 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Born To Be Riled | Wed Mar 20 1991 15:33 | 7 |
| Bill, I kind of agree. If I'd had access to a VHS HiFi deck, I doubt
that I'd have gone for the PCM Toshiba VCR. Of course, it has BOTH,
and I have (once) dubbed 4 channels at once onto it - 2 channels to
PCM, 2 channels to HiFi. All available discretely at the two sets of
RCA outs.
karl
|
2588.44 | Well... at the cost of eating some crow I will tell you that... | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | I'll have 2 all-u-can-eat platters | Wed Mar 20 1991 15:56 | 12 |
| Bill,
Awhile ago I may have been the leading proponent of using HiFi VCRs
for mastering.
What I have since discovered is that they are VERY prone to getting
bad drop-outs either with time or repeated use.
Fortunately I've always mastered simultaneously to VCR and cassette
and haven't lost anything.
BTW, I've used BOTH Beta and VHS.
|
2588.45 | Try turning on the "auto select" track selection | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Freddy Krueger Ski Sharpening | Wed Mar 20 1991 17:13 | 14 |
| hmmmmm....
Maybe I don't use my VCR as much as you use yours (about 2 hours/week
over the last 6 months- once to record Twin Peaks, once to play it!)
:-)
My VCR (a Sanyo) has a smart mode that plays the HiFi tracks if it can
recover them, and the linear tracks otherwise, so dropouts get masked
pretty darn well (yes, occasionally I see the HiFi LED flicker, but
it's very rare with good tape). I can't _hear_ the dropout, probably
because of the masking effect of substituting in the Lo-Fi track
automatically.
-Bill
|
2588.46 | Bandwidth, yes. Distortion too... | FULCRM::PICKETT | David - Gee! No, K.G.B. | Thu Mar 21 1991 08:56 | 7 |
| I was reading, a while back (egad!) and came across an article that mentioned
that VHS HiFi was not the ideal mastering medium that it was cracked up to be.
The author mentioned that although it posesses high bandwidth, there in an odd
distortion introduced when the sound goes from high levels to low levels. Have
any of the VHS HiFi-ers out there experienced this?
dp
|
2588.47 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Born To Be Riled | Thu Mar 21 1991 12:53 | 3 |
| I have noticed that HiFi is slightly more mid-rangey than PCM.
karl
|
2588.48 | SCMS Only at 44.1 KHz Sample Rate | IXION::ROST | Charlie Haden on Sudafed | Thu Apr 25 1991 13:08 | 53 |
| From USENET, some thoughts about SCMS issues:
From: [email protected] (Scott Fisher)
Subject: SCMS Not a problem for music makers.
Date: 25 Apr 91 03:16:48 GMT
I keep seeing all sorts of garbage about the SCMS causing
hassles for copying your masters.
First RECORD YOUR MASTERS AT 48 KHz, SCMS is not implimented at this
sample rate, thus causes no problem.
Before you get excited, There is NO problem DIGITALLY converting 48 KHz
to 44.1 KHZ. The result will be INDISTINGUISHABLE from the same material
originally recorded at 44.1 KHz. All the horror stories you may have heard
are based on assumptions of WIERD conversion techniques that no one uses.
AND you only need to convert to 44.1 KHz if and when you are going to press
your CDs. So to you, there is and will be NO PROBLEM in working with a
48 KHz master anyway.
The CD mastering place may or may not charge you to convert between the
two sample rates. Phone up and check out. If they do charge it should
not be much in comparison to the cost of the CDs you are having pressed.
If it is then go somewhere else. Once again shop around.
The other alternative is to buy a Pro deck. Then you can make as many copies
as you like. However this brings me to a point that has been bugging me.
Even if you do something as bizzare as mastering at 44.1 KHz on an SCMS deck,
you can make as many DIGITAL copies from your original master as you like.
Make 4 copies. What's the problem? Think about it, how many backup copies
do you have of your analog masters? How many backup copies do you have of
your computer software?
Think about this, when you come to DIGITALLY copy your DAT tape
you will need at least two decks. If you really get stuck with a
protected copy of your 44.1 KHz master, what's the problem with borrowing/
hiring a Pro Deck? You are going to need to get another deck from somewhere.
As I said, if you did this at 48 KHz in the first place you would not be in
this mess.
If you do the conversion to 44.1 KHz via an analog step, ie...
44.1 Khz recording from the analog outputs of a deck playing a 48 Khz master.
The resultant 44.1 KHz recording will sound just as good as if you had started
out at 44.1 KHz. I think once a few more of you have experience with DAT
you will see what I mean. Try a 10 generation analog bounce between DAT
machine and check it against the original.
Finally, SCMS is only a problem to people without pro decks who want to make
DIGITAL copies of a DAT tape a friend has recorded off a CD that friend
originally copied off someone else. I think that was the purpose of SCMS, and
it seems to work.
Regards Scott..........STOP WORRYING AND GET INTO DAT!!
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