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In Reply to: RE: SONY Pro Walkman cassette player posted by geoffkait on September 17, 2020 at 14:16:14
Yes, my first introduction to digital recording in 1991 was with a Sony TCD-D3 DAT Walkman. Later I bought a Sony component DAT recorder and I ended up with a TASCAM DAT recorder, which I still have in storage out in the garage. I currently use a TASCAM DA-3000 DSD recorder for copying vinyl records to DSD128. I can listen to these on my FiiO M15 DSD player.
Best Regards,
John Elison
Follow Ups:
I have concluded that the (sonic) problems with CD are in the player not the CD per se. Thus, digital LPs and digital cassettes often sound superior to their silvery brethren. Fuller, more information, more dynamic, better tone, more air. I would like to experiment with DAT Walkman but there aren't many prerecorded DAT cassettes around any more, even counting Grateful Dead. :-)
Edits: 09/20/20
I owned many "Walkmans" when I was younger and none of them came close to the detail, lack of artifacts, and lack of wear of CDs.
The early CD players, particularly the portable ones definitely had issues with harshness, skip protection, and overall reliability. Portable digital has come a LONG ways since then. Modern units have no moving parts and much better DACs then those early CD players.
I would bet my last dollar that in a blind test between the most high tech portable tape player on the planet and even something simple like the Xduoo x2 playing lossless files almost no one would would prefer the portable tape player.
Ah, the old blind test rears its ugly head. How convenient of you to guess the outcome without even doing the test. Smooth.
I lived with cassettes for the first 15 years of my life. They were not not the key to analog sonic bliss. They got stretched, magnetized, demagnetized, full of drop outs, worn out and dull sounding, and that all happens in 10-15 playbacks. Having to keep the heads clean for optimal sound quality and the pinch roller clean so it won't eat your tapes. Always loved playing through a garbled section of previously eaten tape. Warm smooth analog sound there.
Cassettes produce the equivalent of 8 bit sound even on a well recorded and never before played cassette. It only goes downhill from there. Measurable things like wow, flutter, and signal to noise ratio are abysmal.
Sorry to hear you had such bad luck. Better luck next time!
Had nothing to do with luck. It was just the limitations of the technology.
There won't be a next time now that I have access to digital playback that is technology superior in every way and even offers what some people refer to as "analog warmth".
Analog warmth? Shirley you jest. You must not have got the memo, as a general rule digital sounds thin, threadbare, rolled off, boomy, two dimensional, congealed, bland, synthetic, and like papier-mâché.
Edits: 12/23/20
Well, you're too late for DAT. It's basically obsolete. You can rip all your CDs to your computer hard drive and then put them onto a micro SD memory card and play them in a FiiO digital player .
That's what they said about cassettes and LPs. Lol.
> That's what they said about cassettes and LPs. Lol.
Well, I think that's basically true, for me at least. Until two days ago I hadn't played an LP in over a year. A friend sent me five LPs he wanted me to copy to digital.
With regard to analog cassette tape, I used to love it. I owned two Nakamichi Dragons, which were the finest cassette tape recorders I've ever encountered. However, in 1991 I bought my first DAT recorder and it replaced my two Dragons almost immediately.
Now that we have high-resolution digital recorders, DAT has basically gone by the wayside. I still have an old TASCAM DAT recorder just in case I want to listen to all those old DATs I made years ago, but nowadays I do all my recording with a TASCAM DA-3000 DSD recorder.
Good luck,
John Elison
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