T
Tim Gillett
Banned
Well then excuse me for misunderstanding you, but then what IS your contention here? What point are you trying to make?
You really do seem to be generally pro digital no matter what....which I said is OK, but it's simply your view.
I made comments about how something sounds to me when comparing my analog to digital...and your reply is that the analog must be broken....?
It just sounds to me like you are of the belief that analog can't ever beat out digital for sound quality.
Just because I observe a limitation of analog recording methods doesnt make me "pro digital no matter what". It means I am being objective and truthful on the point in discussion by pointing out a factual error. Is that such a bad thing? Or would you prefer I only tell you what you want to hear?
Unless your machine is really out of whack I doubt it is widening the stereo image. Assuming it is well aligned, specifically the record and play heads are closely aligned to each other and you are recording at a relatively high speed such as 15ips, what you are "hearing" as a widening of the stereo image is probably...your imagination.
Also possibly auto suggestion. You may have heard someone else speaking of a wider stereo sound stage with analog tape and you have uncritically believed it.
In any case, as I said before, insofar as analog tape doesnt widen the stereo image, that is a compliment to it. It is only achieving "input = output". If you want to deliberately widen the stereo image, go back and widen it in the mix. The analog tape machine will faithfully record that widened stereo effect, as it should. So will a "non analog" recorder.
If by "sound quality" you mean strict fidelity to the input, yes I do believe that the analog recording method "cant ever beat out digital for sound quality". That's not just my belief. It's an empirical fact. Only a fool would say otherwise.
Again, deliberately induced tape distortion sometimes is a pleasing effect.
And as others have said, you are free to use whatever gear you choose.
Tim