
rob aylestone
Moderator
ah yes - forgot that one. I'm a cheapskate on something and my studio amp is a repurposed tuner amp I bought in the 80s - my grandson pressed the loudness button and it took me ages to work out what had happened.
Yes, my original Denon, in addition to HX* had CPU control of bias and EQ and could 'optimize' any cassette type in about a minute. Also 'dual loop twin capstans' 3 heads and a very sophisticated capstan motor speed control based on direct drive turntable technology. This removed almost all of the bad effects of cassette case transports.To expand a little on Dave's comment about Dolby NR, it would amplify any change caused by other factors. If there was HF loss due to head misalignment or over biasing, Dolby would increase that loss. The fault wasn't Dolby, it was with poorly set up decks. That's one of the reasons external bias adjustment was such a nice feature.
thanks dave for the tech info , very interesting. I must admit when i was using 4 track cassette ( yamaha mt100 ) in the late 80's early 90's i had no clue about the tech aspects etc... in fact i was so green that i made tons of " experimental " mistakes. And im glad to say i hope never to work with tape again .. i know its cool and it does sound awesome but from a practical / mental standpoint the very thought makes me twitch ... lol"Harmon Kardon tape decks are sooo good ! Hard to believe they are tape when listening to a good one."
That experience is common to any top end cassette machine I would say Mark.
I have had a Denon with Dolby HX and 'B' and 'C'. Later a Sony with B&C and a later, simpler Denon. All these machines WHEN BIASED AND SET UP CORRECTLY were capable of reproducing a CD with virtually no audible loss.
Depends to a degree on the music genre. Rock/pop you will never tell the difference, maybe a very wide dynamic range choral piece, Beethoven's Ninth say might be a bit strained at the finale.
I have tried virtually all the tape types over the years except metal but fixed on TDK AD as an excellent type for most recordings and TDK SA for the very highest quality results. AD is type 1 but needs an unusually high bias. SA is T2 and equally a high bias tape. Maxell, BASF, fUJI, Philips are also very good tapes but it is vital that the machine is biased correctly for them.
Myth buster. Dolby NR does NOT cause a treble loss IF the machine is properly setup and the system used correctly.
Dave.