
cjacek
Analogue Enthusiast
Hi,
I'm just wondering if there is any practical way to dis-engage DBX on my 244 ? Thanks ---Daniel
I'm just wondering if there is any practical way to dis-engage DBX on my 244 ? Thanks ---Daniel
The Ghost of FM said:Not that I am aware of.![]()
You might consider picking up a gently used 234. That unit had a switching facility on it but you would need an external mixer to go along with it.
The one upside to getting a 234 as well would be that it had better frequency response specs.
The 244 went to 14khz and the 234 goes up to 16khz.
Cheers!![]()
Beck said:There is a way to do it, but it is a little complicated. Do you want to disable dbx on all tracks or just track 4 to use sync code?
A procedure for disabling dbx on track 4 is described in the February 1988 issue of Home & Studio recording magazine. It involves wiring two switches, one for encode and one for decode. You could also use just one switch with quad poles.
There are four 8-pin jacks on the dbx circuit board. P202 and P204 are for tracks 3 and 4. What you are basically doing is connecting pins 1 and 3 together on jack P202 (encode) and pins 6 and 8 together on P204 (decode). When these are connected dbx is bypassed on track 4.
![]()
Herm said:Blue Bear wrote
Besides, does the world really need more noisy 4-track recordings??????
Not really but they sound a hell of alot better than an Adat.