C
chessparov
New member
Recently I did an (easy) experiment with my BBE 264 sonic maximizer. (the most basic BBE unit BTW-goes for about $70)
Took some commercial CD's and cassettes of identical albums,
and used the BBE to see if they would help the cassette level of
clarity to be closer to a CD in terms of track definition.
By adding between 1-2 db of BBE "processing" to the cassettes
the sound quality improved dramatically without sounding harsh.
The "lo contour" didn't seem to help as much, anywhere between
0-2 db was a moderate enhancement IMHO.
Maybe it's because cassette already has a full sounding low end?
Anyway, if the BBE helped out on professionally mixed, mastered,
etc. recordings, it should help out those of us using cassette based multi-tracks, cassette mixdown/duplication/source material.
Curious if anyone else has had similar experiences?
Chris
P.S. Albums used included greatest hits of James Taylor, Byrds,
and Tom Petty among others.
Took some commercial CD's and cassettes of identical albums,
and used the BBE to see if they would help the cassette level of
clarity to be closer to a CD in terms of track definition.
By adding between 1-2 db of BBE "processing" to the cassettes
the sound quality improved dramatically without sounding harsh.
The "lo contour" didn't seem to help as much, anywhere between
0-2 db was a moderate enhancement IMHO.
Maybe it's because cassette already has a full sounding low end?
Anyway, if the BBE helped out on professionally mixed, mastered,
etc. recordings, it should help out those of us using cassette based multi-tracks, cassette mixdown/duplication/source material.
Curious if anyone else has had similar experiences?
Chris
P.S. Albums used included greatest hits of James Taylor, Byrds,
and Tom Petty among others.