How does it work???

  • Thread starter Thread starter pdadda
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pdadda

pdadda

Captain Sea Boots
I came into the recording scene about 2 years ago with very little money, so I have gone the digital route so far. I know a lot about how the musical "information" is stored when recording digitally, but I know nothing about the process when recording to tape. How is that information stored on the tape, and why do true analog fans say that you need really good converters and high bit rates to come close to analog? Just posting a link will be fine too.
 
OK, I'll give it a shot....

The audio signal is sent to the recording head via a head amp which superimposes a high frequency/high energy "bias" signal on the audio. The head turns the resulting waveform into magnetic impulses which cause the magnetic particles on the tape to have their poles arranged in an orderly fashion, the order being analogous to the signal being recorded. ("Blank" tape has random orientation of its magnetic domains.) On playback, the same magnetic particles passing by the playback head induce a current in the head which is fed into the playback electronics, which filter out the bias frequency and pass the audio signal on for further amplification.

Why do you need really good converters to come close to analog? One reason that comes to mind is that poor converters tend to have high jitter and low-quality filters, which leads to unpleasant distortion of the signal. Because of the high demand driven by consumer playback electronics, a high-quality D/A converter is less expensive than a high-quality A/D converter. That's why cheap onboard computer sound systems tend to play back great (or at least OK), but record very poorly.

Don
 
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