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...
 
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