DBX vinyl discussion (moved from "Who Are You" thread)

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Here is a picture of one I grabbed from online model 224. There were a couple of later model variations but I understand this is the preferred model for decoding dbx encoded records.
At one time you could find them for around $20 online have not checked for years. I have a couple including some dbx encoded records including Who Are You.
Some of the classical records had astonishing dynamic ranges.
 
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Here is a picture of one I grabbed from online model 224. There were a couple of later model variations but I understand this is the preferred model for decoding dbx encoded records.
At one time you could find them for around $20 online have not checked for years. I have a couple including some dbx encoded records including Who Are You.
Some of the classical records had astonishing dynamic ranges.
Nice... I have that model too. It's currently in a box in my loft, together with my turntable, cassette player and interconnect leads. When I move house I intend to create an separate analogue set-up ;)
 
I was a dbx cassette person for years - even after CDs came out, since I did not want to expose CDs in car vs cassettes which I could replace. I still have approx 3000 hand recorded dbx encoded cassettes in my basement. Once hard drive space got cheap enough, then I stopped making cassettes and started ripping with eac. Here is one of my cassette / dbx configurations. That’s a dbx 224x-ds.

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I was a dbx cassette person for years - even after CDs came out, since I did not want to expose CDs in car vs cassettes which I could replace. I still have approx 3000 hand recorded dbx encoded cassettes in my basement. Once hard drive space got cheap enough, then I stopped making cassettes and started ripping with eac. Here is one of my cassette / dbx configurations. That’s a dbx 224-xds.

View attachment 114167
I had a Nak TD-700 for my car back in the day, and a BX-300 to dub the CDs.
 
I had a Nak deck in my car for a while. I had a few decks stolen even with the removable faceplates. May still have my last one a Sony in the garage. That may have had dolby C decoding. I tracked down a DBX decoder add on for the car but never used it.
 
I was a dbx cassette person for years - even after CDs came out, since I did not want to expose CDs in car vs cassettes which I could replace. I still have approx 3000 hand recorded dbx encoded cassettes in my basement. Once hard drive space got cheap enough, then I stopped making cassettes and started ripping with eac. Here is one of my cassette / dbx configurations. That’s a dbx 224x-ds.

View attachment 114167

That Nakamichi tape deck was pretty much the holy grail of cassette decks back in its day. I always had decks with the dbx built in.
 
That Nakamichi tape deck was pretty much the holy grail of cassette decks back in its day. I always had decks with the dbx built in.

Cassettes at 1-3/4 ips were useless as a high fidelity recording medium. Then came dbx encode / decode which made a world of difference especially with those Nak decks.

As for me, I was totally anal and used dbx on 7-1/2 ips reel-to-reel. You know, half the convenience at twice the price.
 
I always preferred my AIWA F990 deck, nicknamed “The Dragon (Nakamichi) Slayer.” Still works like the day I bought it, and have 10 unopened Maxell 90 minute metal tapes. I agree with AR though, I prefer my Akai 7” stereo and quad decks when it comes to tape.
 
What groups did you tape?
Little Feat, 10cc, Joe Cocker and many more I don't recall. However the best recordings I made were of Midnight Oil. Their sound guy used to let me plug straight into the mixing desk . So I'd have 2 x line level inputs then plug a mic into the blend channel for room ambiance.
 
I always preferred my AIWA F990 deck, nicknamed “The Dragon (Nakamichi) Slayer.” Still works like the day I bought it, and have 10 unopened Maxell 90 minute metal tapes. I agree with AR though, I prefer my Akai 7” stereo and quad decks when it comes to tape.
Not even close...
 
Techmoan channel on youtube demonstrates playing dbx vinyl, he was very impressed with the sound quality.
Indeed, dbx really was very good for the time. In the early 80's I would record dbx LP's onto cassette tape using a Technics dbx capable cassette deck. By the mid 80's I would record CD's onto cassette tape using a newer version of a Technics dbx capable cassette deck. As analogue audio goes, nothing could touch it.

In the early 90's I dabbled recording CD's onto cassette tape using a Sony Dolby-S deck, which also sounded very good... But by this time the writing was well and truely on the wall for playing analogue tapes!
 
In the early 90's I dabbled recording CD's onto cassette tape using a Sony Dolby-S deck, which also sounded very good... But by this time the writing was well and truely on the wall for playing analogue tapes!
I bought a Pioneer Dolby S twin cassette deck in the late 90s and barely used it. I shouldn't have bought it, but I was assembling my first hifi once I had a place of my own and hifi included a cassette deck so I bought one. It's in the loft. I used my Panasonic S-VHS deck far more for recording radio since it had much better sound quality. That's still in my rack but doesn't get used often now.
 
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