T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
802.1 | | VLNVAX::KARLSON | Only 185 shopping days until Xmas! | Tue Jun 23 1987 13:59 | 11 |
|
RE: .-1
Along the same lines ...
Can someone provide me with information, or a pointer to
information about the cassette/CD converter mentioned in .-1????
Any/all help is appreciated ...
-rjk
|
802.2 | Play the tape of your CD's in your can | STAR::JACOBI | Paul Jacobi - VAX/VMS Development | Tue Jun 23 1987 14:53 | 9 |
|
I suggest recording the CD's at home, and playing the tapes in your
car. The tape can always be replaced, and your CD's are kept safe.
Although some will disagree, I believe that the fidelity of CD's
are negated by the road and engine noise. Your attention should
be focused on the road instead of the stereo.
|
802.3 | | CUPOLA::HAKKARAINEN | with hasty reverence | Tue Jun 23 1987 14:58 | 7 |
| Re the converter:
I bought one a couple of months ago. It's been great for long trips.
The sound isn't as good as a home cd unit (or a portable unit played
at home), but darn, it's nice. The Recoton (Recotron?) cost about
20 bucks at Service Merchandise in Auburn. Should be available elsewhere.
|
802.4 | Get a deck with AUX input jacks | DSSDEV::CHAN | | Tue Jun 23 1987 15:17 | 10 |
| Since you are starting from scratch, find a cassette deck with auxilary
input jacks. Then you can tape your CDs at first, upgrade by
purchasing a portable CD player and just plug it in. No adaptor
needed so you don't have to dish out any more bucks or have this
extra thing hanging around. It probable sounds better since the
signal path is more direct (I'd say that it "does" sound better
but I haven't looked at any car stereo schematics.)
Kenney
|
802.5 | 1 vote for tape | FROST::EDSOND | | Tue Jun 23 1987 15:22 | 15 |
| I would cast my vote for a good cassette player and record your
CDs onto cassette as mentioned in 802.2. This way, if someone
rips off the tape, you still have the master (CD). If you go
with the car CD player, you risk losing the master.
Unless you have golden ears, you won't find much difference between
the tape and the CD (provided you have a good home cassette recorder).
The car noise will tend to cancel out the dynamic range.
On the negative side of this suggestion, you'll have to worry about
the copyguard issue. If copyguard becomes a reality, you may not
be able to record the CDs onto tape. (Don't know if copyguard only
applies to DAT recorders?)
Don
|
802.6 | Copy Guard Rumor Central | USRCV1::THOMPSONP | Paul Thompson | Tue Jun 23 1987 16:15 | 4 |
| I don't know whether CopyGuard is limited to DATs, but I have heard
some discussion thart if the law is passed it might be implemented
in all recording devices.
|
802.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Tue Jun 23 1987 16:32 | 10 |
| The Recoton adaptor works well, but not with Pioneer units. I
agree that a model that has a separate input for a portable CD
player is a good bet. I can hear the difference between a CD
and a good cassette, especially on cold days with the wow and flutter
of the cassette player.
I'd be hesitant about buying an in-dash CD unit, unless you are
on very good terms with your insurance company.
Steve
|
802.8 | One more vote for Taping | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Common Sense Rules! | Tue Jun 23 1987 18:06 | 14 |
| I'll vote for taping, or spending the $600+ for the Sony Cartridge
system (Holds 8 disks in a player stored in your trunk). Storing
a CD in a car risks theft, and also warpage from extreme heat and
cold. Granted, CDs should last forever but after a few hot August
days in the middle of a parking lot, I'm not sure.
And then there is Dynamic range, a CrO2 tape with Dolby recorded
from a CD will have a better sound than an LP. If you have a CD
player running and open the window of your car a crack, any incremental
gain in music quality over the tape goes out the window (literally).
A tape also gives you 90 min. of music, but isn't as fast with track
selection.
Play it safe, and cheaper. Tape them.
|
802.9 | Why I don't tape | ULTRA::HERBISON | UNAUTHORIZED ACCESS ONLY | Tue Jun 23 1987 19:01 | 17 |
| Taping CDs for car use has several problems:
- You have a choice: tape all of your CDs or be limited when
you select music for the car. I don't want to be limited.
- Taping increases the cost of the music you buy by about 15%
(the cost of the tape). I would rather have 15% more CDs.
- Taping CDs significantly increases the room needed to store
the media. I'm always running out of room for music (I have
the same problem with books) and don't want to make it worse.
- Taping CDs is an effort, and I'm lazy.
So I have a CD player in my car.
B.J.
|
802.10 | One player does it all (for now) | STAR::BIGELOW | Bruce Bigelow, DECnet-VAX | Tue Jun 23 1987 20:36 | 27 |
| Well, I decided to put all of my money into CDs (rather than other
things) BEFORE copy-guard (aka music mangling) maybe becomes a reality.
I can always spend money on a fancy player/tape/etc later.
What I did was buy a Sony D-7 and that's it. I use it in the office,
at home, and in the car via the Recoton adapter. I purchased the
Recoton adapter at Lechmere in Nashua 6 months ago for about $17.
I'm not sure of the current price, but they had lots of them last
week when I was there. The only problem I had was that the D-7
seems a bit prone to skipping on bumps - I solved this with a small
1/2" plywood lidless, frontless box lines with carpet padding.
Now it takes a pretty large frost heave to give me a skip.
After caopy-guard arrives, if it does, I can tape if I want, buy
a fancy player for home, buy a fancy player in my next car (the
one I drive now is 8 years old), or whatever.
On the subject of quality, I did have to replace the "stock" speakers
in my car to make myself happy ($29 at Lechmere on sale). As noted
above, there are several opinions on this issue. Mine is that the
D-7 sounds far better than a tape of a CD. I find it LESS distracting
to listen to the best sound I can get (CD rather than tape), and
MORE distracting to be displeased with tape hiss, etc. To each his
or her own.
Bruce
|
802.11 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Tue Jun 23 1987 23:52 | 15 |
| Re: .8
Two nits:
The Sony CDX-A10 will play ten discs, not eight. Also, it has
a switchable compression circuit to compensate for the dynamic
range problem you mentioned.
Still, I was utterly blown away by the difference between high
quality tapes I had recorded and the same discs played through my
D-5 and the Recoton adaptor. You can definitely hear the quality.
The adaptor is a nuisance, though, and I'd recommend a direct
input somewhere and a dedicated power source rather than the
cigarette lighter.
Steve
|
802.12 | MY DECISION | ANNEX::LOVING | Jim Loving | Wed Jun 24 1987 10:11 | 10 |
| Thanks for all your input. I think I will look for a good cassette deck
with direct inputs for portable cd. For the money I would spend
for a cd player, I can get a goooood cassette deck.
Thanks
Jim
|
802.13 | Go with tape | PRANCR::TIMPSON | Religion! Just say no. | Wed Jun 24 1987 10:15 | 6 |
|
I recently purchased a new car that has a tape deck that takes
Metal (CrO2,furrow) tapes. They sound great when the music is copied
from CD's. Besides you talking BIG BUCKS if you want a car CD.
Steve
|
802.14 | Good choice | DSSDEV::CHAN | | Wed Jun 24 1987 10:32 | 10 |
| The problem with a portable in a car is skipping. I built a box
but used sponges instead of carpeting. It helped a lot in my setup,
a D5 in a 200SX turbo, but by no means was it skip-proof. My car
does not have a soft suspension and the CD player knew it. Since
you decided to go the portable road, see where you can put it first
and then rig up your own suspension system when you get it. Then
again you may own an Accura Legend and will just throw it on the
dashboard with no problems :^)
Kenney
|
802.15 | Pioneer Problems | VISA::BLAKE | Colin Blake | Wed Jun 24 1987 11:34 | 12 |
| re .7
> The Recoton adaptor works well, but not with Pioneer units.
Do you mean it doesn't work well with Pioneer Car Cassette units,
or with Pioneer Portable CD players?
And is the problem specific to the Recoton adaptor, or is it a general
problem that would apply to any adaptor (I guess I couldn't get a
Rocoton here in France!).
Colin.
|
802.16 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Wed Jun 24 1987 14:28 | 9 |
| Re: .15
The Recoton adaptor does not work with Pioneer car cassette units.
I believe it's because the Pioneers use a method of determining
that the tape is not moving that the Recoton doesn't fool (tape
tension, perhaps). I would expect that it would affect any
similar adaptor. The Recoton does allow the tape hubs to turn,
which is sufficient for most cassette players.
Steve
|
802.17 | SONY adaptor ??? | VISA::BLAKE | Colin Blake | Thu Jun 25 1987 04:01 | 9 |
| re: .16
Thanks for the information.
re: all
I have heard that SONY make an adaptor too. Does anyone know anything?
Colin.
|
802.18 | SONY CDP-1 | JANUS::HUDSON | William Hudson, REO2-G/F2 DTN 830-3101 | Thu Jun 25 1987 05:45 | 11 |
| In the UK the SONY adaptor is the CDP-1 and sells for about �20.
It does have the tape hubs connected by a loop (or something) and
so does fake tape movement. It works in two car cassette decks I've
owned - Blaupunkt and Philips.
BTW they're currently giving them away in the US if you buy a Discman
before the middle of July (I think). Just find a rebate coupon in
one of the hifi magazines and send it off - they are also giving
away two free CD's (not a great choice, though).
wrh
|
802.19 | Sony Adapter ~= Recoton | STAR::BIGELOW | Bruce Bigelow, DECnet-VAX | Thu Jun 25 1987 12:40 | 10 |
| I have seen and used both the Sony and Recoton adapter - they seem
to be identical, except that the tape head inside the cassette-like
package on one is a double-track head (with only one side used)
and the other is a single-track head. I don't remember which is
which, but it doesn't seem to matter much. Both have the hubs
connected by a sort of rubber band, which makes both hubs always
turn at the same speed, no matter which is driven.
Bruce
|
802.20 | Car CD player bargain! | VAXWRK::INGRAM | Larry Ingram | Fri Jun 26 1987 12:24 | 12 |
| If anybody's interested...
Ann & Hope, a discount department store chain with stores in
Massachusetts and Rhode Island, is selling the Pioneer CDX-P1
car CD player for $199.95! This sale is for 2 days only; July
2nd and 3rd. Also at $199.95 is the Pioneer KE-A880(?) tuner/
cassete unit.
There is a catch though... the small print states that each
store only has 6 "assorted" units and NO rainchecks. Bummer.
Larry
|
802.21 | Another route... | ISTG::YERAZUNIS | VAXstation Repo Man | Sat Jun 27 1987 12:18 | 18 |
| Spark-o-Matic makes a CD-to-Car adapter that works slightly differently
than the Reticon system- it's a tiny FM Stereo transmitter that
takes the CD output, modulates it (in stereo) onto a 90.1 MHz FM
signal, and runs that signal into your car FM tuner.
The little box also makes the proper voltage to run a D-7 or D-5.
I've had one for over a year, no problems except a blown fuse when
I plugged a completely dead battery onto the D-7 and the power surge
popped the .75 amp fuse. Solution- either run only the player (no
battery attached) or run it on batteries first to verify that the
battery has some charge left in it..
Sound quality is fine- better than tapes played directly through
the cassette player. The little box can be stuck anywhere under
the dash and two cords (power + stereo signal) come out.
Cost- about $20 at K-Mart.
|
802.22 | Opinionated? | WLDWST::BACHUR | Dave x7418 Pager #19 | Wed Jul 01 1987 08:57 | 33 |
|
re: 802.2
Opinion:
1. > fidelity of CD's are negated by the road and engine noise.
2. > Your attention should be focused on the road instead
of the stereo.
I'd like to comment on the above two opinions. First off there are
alot of cars out today that have no audible engine noise within
the interior and insignificant levels of road noise. I could imagine
what kind of car this person must own to be against having CD sound in the
car. I would have to say you should experience it in the correct manner
before making such a general statement.
Secondly, it shouldn't make any difference whether you play
tapes or CD's , your attention level should be the same. Its true
that some people can't listen to stereo and drive safely at same time.
Maybe this guy has a problem doing both, but I can speak for the
majority of the people who have CD Stereo systems in their
cars.
There ain't nothing finer! (YET)
A Happy YCD-1000
Owner
|
802.23 | | PDVAX::P_DAVIS | Peter Davis (aka SARAH::P_DAVIS) | Wed Jul 01 1987 11:50 | 15 |
| Re/ .22:
I can't believe there are ANY cars around today with "no audible engine
noise within the interior." At least, not cars with internal
combustion engines. Sure, some are quieter than others, but I'm sure
that even in a Rolls, you could tell by the sound whether the engine
was running or not.
Secondly, a compact disc could be more distracting than tape, since
it has a wider dynamic range. You could be listening to a quiet
passage in the music, and suddenly be jolted out of your seat by
a louder section. Even without such dramatic cases, when I'm at
home, I find that LPs and tapes are easier to listen to as background
music, because CDs make me want to pay attention to the music.
They're hard to ignore.
|
802.24 | dB's is dBs! | KACIE::WAGNER | I want my <esc> TV! | Wed Jul 01 1987 14:29 | 17 |
| re earlier:
There are NO cars with NO appreciable noise. The *quietest* that
has been made as far as noise goes was a late 70's Lincoln Town
car (according to several car magazines) and its background noise
at IDLE was 54dB, at 70 MPH it was 66dB.
Now, if you add the dynamic range of the typical CD �80dB(~) to
that 54 dB you are talking ear damage if you set your volume to
hear the quiet tones, when a loud peak comes along. Conversely,
if you set the volume for a loud peak, then you will lose all the
quiet ones. A tape has lower range and is more compatible.
Attention is a seperate issue.
David
|
802.25 | Well... | DSSDEV::STRANGE | Being for the benefit of Mr. Kite | Wed Jul 01 1987 14:50 | 6 |
| Build a signal compressor. Then you can still use discs and hear
all the passages. But perhaps this defeats the whole thing. Of
course, you'd be best off using headphones, but that is probably
illegal in most states (probably should be).
-Steve
|
802.26 | C'mon, you guys | THE780::ALVIDREZ | The State of the Artie | Wed Jul 01 1987 15:11 | 13 |
| All right, already!
Despite the fact that a car's interior is not the most optimum for listening
to music on CD, it is still much more enjoyable than cassettes or FM because
THE MUSIC SOUNDS BETTER! Isn't that enough? And it is almost as
convenient.
Sure, if you slip some classical selection or new age on the CD, you're
gonna miss a lot of it in the car. But for most jazz and rock recordings,
it can't be beat! I do my serious listening at home and my groove music
listening on the road.
AAA
|
802.27 | Automotive Noise Sources | USRCV1::THOMPSONP | Paul Thompson | Wed Jul 01 1987 18:27 | 11 |
| re .24
At 70 MPH, it is unlikely that you experience much engine noise.
Wind noise will most likely drown it out.
I owned a 1981 Supra for a short period and found that at idle I
could not detect the engine running from the driver's seat except
by looking at the tach. I do agree, however, that the ambient noise
in a car environment would rule out total compatibility with wide
dynamic range CD's.
|
802.28 | Dynamic Range vs. Car Environment | STAR::BIGELOW | Bruce Bigelow, DECnet-VAX | Wed Jul 01 1987 19:17 | 27 |
| I don't completely agree that CD dynamic range in incompatible with
the car environment. It took a bit of ingenuity, but I have more
or less solved the problem to my satisfaction.
I use the Recoton adapter into my radio/cassette player. This plugs
into the earphone jack on my D-7, which allows me to control the
output level. I set the output level way down, and the radio volume
at about 2/3 (right before where it starts to put out hiss) and
this works rather well. Initially I found that I had to set the
volume control on the D-7 so low that it was tricky to get it right.
I solved this by getting a new set of speakers that took a bit more
power to drive them (they also sound MUCH better than the old stock
speakers in my car). Now I can turn up the volume on the D-7 far
enough that it's less tricky to set, and I get very good sound at
a reasonable dynamic range. I only have 2 or 3 discs where I find
myself juggling the volume, and none that suddenly blow me out of
the car. Not even when the 4th movement of Mahler's 1st begins...
As for those who can't drive and listen at the same time, it probably
takes more than technology to solve that problem. We all have our
personal shortcomings, and we each have to do whatever's necessary
to overcome them. I'm just glad that my own don't include problems
with listening while driving - I'd go crazy during my hour of commute
each way to work!
Bruce
|
802.29 | To change the tack of this discussion a little | HULK::DJPL | Do you believe in magic? | Thu Jul 02 1987 14:45 | 13 |
| I need something before I even CONSIDER cds in the car.
I do not like the idea of the jewel box in the car because it takes up too much
space.
What I'm looking for is a manila or light cardboard envelope, preferrably
with a foam lining onthe iside to inhibit scratching. That way, you could
handle CDs in the car with one hand and you would be able to store more per
square inch.
Does such a thing exist in the New England area? I'd have a hard time
selecting 10 CDs out of my collection for the 'jukebox' type changers
so....
|
802.30 | | PDVAX::P_DAVIS | Peter Davis (aka SARAH::P_DAVIS) | Thu Jul 02 1987 17:04 | 11 |
|
Re/ .29:
There are cases made of nylon (and/or possibly other fabrics) which
are designed for carrying CDs around without the jewel boxes. Some
of these are designed to be glued onto a Sony portable player.
I think most of these would be designed to carry around 6 to 10
discs, although I don't know for sure.
I agree with you that the jewel box is pretty unwieldy to handle
while driving.
|
802.31 | CD Wallet - available, but bad idea | STAR::BIGELOW | Bruce Bigelow, DECnet-VAX | Thu Jul 02 1987 17:06 | 13 |
| Yes, it's sort of available, but not a good idea.
Lechmere in Nashua has a "CD Wallet" for about $12 which will hold
six discs in a wallet about 1/2" high. It's a sort of velour inside.
The problem is that sliding discs in and out of the pockets scratches
them if there's even a small amount of dust in there - and it's
impossible to clean inside the pockets once they get dirty. The velour
holds onto dust very tenaciously. And the scratches that happened
to me were almost all in the worst direction possible. I stopped
using that wallet FAST after just one airplane trip with it and
my D-7, luckily before it ruined any of my discs.
Bruce
|
802.32 | | PDVAX::P_DAVIS | Peter Davis (aka SARAH::P_DAVIS) | Thu Jul 02 1987 18:53 | 3 |
| The envelopes that floppy discs come in are made of a special lint-free
paper. These might potentially be useable for CD storage, but I
haven't tried them.
|
802.33 | My opinion.... | STAR::JACOBI | Paul Jacobi - VAX/VMS Development | Mon Jul 06 1987 19:07 | 22 |
|
Things to keep in mind about car stereo....
- A stereo system is only as good as the weakest component.
The quality of the CD players will usually exceed most car
amp/speakers.
- Outside noises, engine noise, ignition noise, and inside acoustics
affect sound quality.
- Adapters will affect sound quality.
- Inside automobile environment is "hell" to all music media.
- Be sure to yield Right-of-way to emergency vehicles.
-Paul
|
802.34 | Don't read if you hate flippant remarks | DECWET::THOMAS | A legend in his own lunchtime | Mon Jul 06 1987 20:58 | 5 |
| Re: .33
And don't forget to always rotate your tires. Sorry, couldn't resist.
Mike
|
802.35 | And they make this awful noise... | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Tue Jul 07 1987 00:35 | 5 |
| RE .34
I always rotate my tires while driving.
Otherwise, they wear too fast.
|
802.36 | Somewhere back on the subject... | JANUS::HUDSON | William Hudson, REO-G/F2 DTN 830-3101 | Tue Jul 07 1987 05:59 | 8 |
| I have to say that having used the car adaptor with my SONY D10,
I am now considering getting a radio/cassette with a line-in option.
The adaptor is OK for rock/pop but really good quality (ie,
chrome/metal) cassettes sond lots better to me - particularly for
classics. My last radio/cassette came with circuit diagrams so I
did it myself, but no such luck on the Philips.
wrh
|
802.37 | Re .29 | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Tue Jul 07 1987 08:49 | 16 |
| I recently received a catalog from a Sharper-Image-ish compant that
specialized in yuppie golf and portable sound equipment. They offered a slim
plastic device that holds CDs by the edge. When opened, the device folds back
in the middle of the side with the CD in it, to give you easy access.
Interesting, but not cheap.
I used to carry my collection in the car in a modified CD carrying case. It
allowed me to take 25 cds in a space meant for 12. Once my collection got too
big, I started taking just the 4-5 I wanted to hear that day. I found that
once I cleaned the last 3 years worth of Gas receipts and all the other junk
out of my glove box, I had more than enough room. I find for the usual back
and forth to work trips, I don't mind deciding in the morning. For longer
trips, I still bring the case with a wider variety of music.
- JP
|
802.38 | Recoton/Pioneer *does* work | VISA::BLAKE | Colin Blake | Mon Aug 03 1987 05:44 | 7 |
| re: .15 .16
I borrowed a Recoton adaptor to try in my Pioneer car cassette player
and lo and behold it worked. What's more I even managed to find
a shop here that sells the Recoton adaptors.
Colin.
|