There's some confusion here. Recording with Dolby B and then turning it off fro replay results in extra HF and was a popular way to do things, especially if you just backed the treble back a bit - BUT - DBX is a companding system and is frequency neutral - it simply squashed the signal on record and expands it on replay, taking the noise down with it. The result of getting round the wrong way is that you record normally, and then expand it on replay, and then the sound gets kind of spiky - loud notes really hang out, while quiet ones can hardly be heard. If the track is bass heavy already then it sounds wild bass heavy, but a track that has something like a prominent hi-hat pattern cuts your ears off. Do it the other way around and you just get a compressed mess like turning a compressor up really high. Is this what it sounds like? What happens if you record with DBX and replay with DBX - does that sound ok? Dolby let you change the output sound to suit - DBX needed to be on or off - but the same on both recording and replay.