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#1
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
A short time ago we had a discussion involving fussiness with respect to
CD-Rs and high end CD players. Perhaps some can shed light on what's going in this Arcam player posted on the ng, rec.music.classical.recordings http://groups.google.com/group/rec.m...013552dc1f70d2 |
#2
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
On May 19, 5:48*pm, "Norman M. Schwartz" wrote:
A short time ago we had a discussion involving fussiness with respect to CD-Rs and high end CD players. Perhaps some can shed light on what's going in this Arcam player posted on the ng, rec.music.classical.recordings http://groups.google.com/group/rec.m...rdings/browse_... If I had to venture a guess, the ARCAM has a hole in its software. And I guess that at its typical selling prices, that is acceptable - and makers of "lesser" units would never get away with that sort of thing. I find it strange that my very early Revox CD player (B225) has no trouble with any CD medium, whether OEM stamped or dye-type CD or CD-R types. Stuff that was not even a gleam in a designer's eye at the time it was made. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
#3
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
On Mon, 19 May 2008 18:44:50 -0700, Peter Wieck wrote
(in article ): On May 19, 5:48*pm, "Norman M. Schwartz" wrote: A short time ago we had a discussion involving fussiness with respect to CD-Rs and high end CD players. Perhaps some can shed light on what's going in this Arcam player posted on the ng, rec.music.classical.recordings http://groups.google.com/group/rec.m...rdings/browse_... If I had to venture a guess, the ARCAM has a hole in its software. And I guess that at its typical selling prices, that is acceptable - and makers of "lesser" units would never get away with that sort of thing. I find it strange that my very early Revox CD player (B225) has no trouble with any CD medium, whether OEM stamped or dye-type CD or CD-R types. Stuff that was not even a gleam in a designer's eye at the time it was made. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA Wow, that is amazing! I have the original Magnavox (still) * you know, the pretty little top loader with the all brushed-aluminum case and built like a tank? And I've found that it won't play anything but stamped Redbook disks. |
#4
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
"Peter Wieck" wrote in message
On May 19, 5:48 pm, "Norman M. Schwartz" wrote: A short time ago we had a discussion involving fussiness with respect to CD-Rs and high end CD players. Perhaps some can shed light on what's going in this Arcam player posted on the ng, rec.music.classical.recordings http://groups.google.com/group/rec.m...rdings/browse_... If I had to venture a guess, the ARCAM has a hole in its software. And I guess that at its typical selling prices, that is acceptable - and makers of "lesser" units would never get away with that sort of thing. I find it strange that my very early Revox CD player (B225) has no trouble with any CD medium, whether OEM stamped or dye-type CD or CD-R types. Stuff that was not even a gleam in a designer's eye at the time it was made. I have a CDP 101 that still works, and plays every CD-R I stick into it. |
#5
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
On May 19, 11:56*pm, Sonnova wrote:
On Mon, 19 May 2008 18:44:50 -0700, Peter Wieck wrote (in article ): On May 19, 5:48*pm, "Norman M. Schwartz" wrote: A short time ago we had a discussion involving fussiness with respect to CD-Rs and high end CD players. Perhaps some can shed light on what's going in this Arcam player posted on the ng, rec.music.classical.recordings http://groups.google.com/group/rec.m...rdings/browse_... If I had to venture a guess, the ARCAM has a hole in its software. And I guess that at its typical selling prices, that is acceptable - and makers of "lesser" units would never get away with that sort of thing. I find it strange that my very early Revox CD player (B225) has no trouble with any CD medium, whether OEM stamped or dye-type CD or CD-R types. Stuff that was not even a gleam in a designer's eye at the time it was made. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA Wow, that is amazing! I have the original Magnavox (still) * you know, the pretty little top loader with the all brushed-aluminum case and built like a tank? *And I've found that it won't play anything but stamped Redbook disks.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - This one? http://img95.imageshack.us/img95/650...tonopen1wm.jpg I expect that Philips would use very nearly the same DAC chips as Revox at the time - and both certainly used the Philips-pattern transport - so it has to be something else. Speculating wildly, when I purchased my Revox (used, $125) some 8 years ago, it seemed to be barely used although it has gotten very heavy use since - maybe the laser is stronger? Or the focus tighter? Or pure blind luck? There are trimmer pots for the laser - yes, if it ain't broke and so forth - but it may be a matter of focus and strength. But, my point was that ARCAM has no excuse (today or over the last 2-3 years) making a CD player not fully media-agile if other makers were doing it inadvertantly years ago. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
#6
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
In article , Peter Wieck wrote:
I find it strange that my very early Revox CD player (B225) has no trouble with any CD medium, whether OEM stamped or dye-type CD or CD-R types. Stuff that was not even a gleam in a designer's eye at the time it was made. Hear, hear! My 225 (bought new back in the old days, and never seen inside of a repair shop except for a couple of tweaks of the laser voltage) does the same. All this talk of CD players being the same - I noticed the difference bewteen the Revox and the top-of-the-line Sony the day I bought the Revox. I did the same comparison a few days ago between the Revox and my Sony DVD-CD-DivX-Everything else player. BIG difference. The Revox still sounds better to my ears. Greg. -- Greg Grainger grainger(at)vex.net 'What a world of gammon and spinach it is, though, ain't it?' - Miss Mowcher |
#7
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
Norman M. Schwartz wrote:
A short time ago we had a discussion involving fussiness with respect to CD-Rs and high end CD players. Perhaps some can shed light on what's going in this Arcam player posted on the ng, rec.music.classical.recordings http://groups.google.com/group/rec.m...013552dc1f70d2 And there was a time when no CD player made by Sony was able to play CDRs. And I believe they did that on purpose to prevent people from using copied CDs. But they changed it after realizing that they don't control the world any more ... if they ever did. br, 5.1 |
#8
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
On Tue, 20 May 2008 15:43:10 -0700, Peter Wieck wrote
(in article ): On May 19, 11:56*pm, Sonnova wrote: On Mon, 19 May 2008 18:44:50 -0700, Peter Wieck wrote (in article ): On May 19, 5:48*pm, "Norman M. Schwartz" wrote: A short time ago we had a discussion involving fussiness with respect to CD-Rs and high end CD players. Perhaps some can shed light on what's going in this Arcam player posted on the ng, rec.music.classical.recordings http://groups.google.com/group/rec.m...rdings/browse_... If I had to venture a guess, the ARCAM has a hole in its software. And I guess that at its typical selling prices, that is acceptable - and makers of "lesser" units would never get away with that sort of thing. I find it strange that my very early Revox CD player (B225) has no trouble with any CD medium, whether OEM stamped or dye-type CD or CD-R types. Stuff that was not even a gleam in a designer's eye at the time it was made. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA Wow, that is amazing! I have the original Magnavox (still) * you know, the pretty little top loader with the all brushed-aluminum case and built like a tank? *And I've found that it won't play anything but stamped Redbook disks.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - This one? http://img95.imageshack.us/img95/650...tonopen1wm.jpg Nope. That's not the original 14-bit magnavox player This is: http://gon8.audiogon.com/i/c/f/1210080247.jpg In fact it's the first CD player on the market and it sounded better than any of the first gen Japanese units, including the Kyocera. Philips showed it as a prototype in their booth at the Las Vegas Winter CES in 1982. It was the first CD player I ever saw. I kept it because its so nicely made (reminds me more of a 1950's Germen camera than it does of a hi-fi component) and so pretty. It still works. |
#9
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
Greg Grainger wrote:
In article , Peter Wieck wrote: I find it strange that my very early Revox CD player (B225) has no trouble with any CD medium, whether OEM stamped or dye-type CD or CD-R types. Stuff that was not even a gleam in a designer's eye at the time it was made. Hear, hear! My 225 (bought new back in the old days, and never seen inside of a repair shop except for a couple of tweaks of the laser voltage) does the same. All this talk of CD players being the same - I noticed the difference bewteen the Revox and the top-of-the-line Sony the day I bought the Revox. I did the same comparison a few days ago between the Revox and my Sony DVD-CD-DivX-Everything else player. BIG difference. The Revox still sounds better to my ears. I'd bet no one here is particualrly surprised when someone reports a BIG difference between CDPs from a sighted comparison. Far more notable would be if you documented tellomg them apart in a blind, level-matched comparison. -- -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. |
#10
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
In article ,
Sonnova wrote: http://gon8.audiogon.com/i/c/f/1210080247.jpg In fact it's the first CD player on the market and it sounded better than any of the first gen Japanese units, including the Kyocera. Philips showed it as a prototype in their booth at the Las Vegas Winter CES in 1982. It was the first CD player I ever saw. I kept it because its so nicely made (reminds me more of a 1950's Germen camera than it does of a hi-fi component) and so pretty. It still works. Wow, thanks for that blast from the past! It was the first player that I heard as well. My conducting mentor made the first U.S. made symphonic digital recording, and when it came out on CD, I rushed down to the audio store and listened to it on that player. I was mightily impressed and bought one on the spot! |
#11
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
On Tue, 20 May 2008 19:04:17 -0700, Steven Sullivan wrote
(in article ): Greg Grainger wrote: In article , Peter Wieck wrote: I find it strange that my very early Revox CD player (B225) has no trouble with any CD medium, whether OEM stamped or dye-type CD or CD-R types. Stuff that was not even a gleam in a designer's eye at the time it was made. Hear, hear! My 225 (bought new back in the old days, and never seen inside of a repair shop except for a couple of tweaks of the laser voltage) does the same. All this talk of CD players being the same - I noticed the difference bewteen the Revox and the top-of-the-line Sony the day I bought the Revox. I did the same comparison a few days ago between the Revox and my Sony DVD-CD-DivX-Everything else player. BIG difference. The Revox still sounds better to my ears. I'd bet no one here is particualrly surprised when someone reports a BIG difference between CDPs from a sighted comparison. Far more notable would be if you documented tellomg them apart in a blind, level-matched comparison. I don't doubt that the Revox sounds good. Most of the bad sounding CD players from that era wasn't actually the players but rather the CDs. Have you ever seen a Sony 1620 or 1630 CD mastering encoder that was used for virtually all CD production in the early years of the format? It had more electrolytic capacitors and 709/741 era op-amps in the signal path than you could shake a stick at. No wonder early CDs sound so harsh. |
#12
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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High End CD Players
Sonnova wrote:
On Tue, 20 May 2008 15:43:10 -0700, Peter Wieck wrote (in article ): On May 19, 11:56 pm, Sonnova wrote: On Mon, 19 May 2008 18:44:50 -0700, Peter Wieck wrote (in article ): On May 19, 5:48 pm, "Norman M. Schwartz" wrote: A short time ago we had a discussion involving fussiness with respect to CD-Rs and high end CD players. Perhaps some can shed light on what's going in this Arcam player posted on the ng, rec.music.classical.recordings http://groups.google.com/group/rec.m...rdings/browse_... If I had to venture a guess, the ARCAM has a hole in its software. And I guess that at its typical selling prices, that is acceptable - and makers of "lesser" units would never get away with that sort of thing. I find it strange that my very early Revox CD player (B225) has no trouble with any CD medium, whether OEM stamped or dye-type CD or CD-R types. Stuff that was not even a gleam in a designer's eye at the time it was made. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA Wow, that is amazing! I have the original Magnavox (still) * you know, the pretty little top loader with the all brushed-aluminum case and built like a tank? And I've found that it won't play anything but stamped Redbook disks.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - This one? http://img95.imageshack.us/img95/650...tonopen1wm.jpg Nope. That's not the original 14-bit magnavox player This is: http://gon8.audiogon.com/i/c/f/1210080247.jpg In fact it's the first CD player on the market and it sounded better than any of the first gen Japanese units, including the Kyocera. Philips showed it as a prototype in their booth at the Las Vegas Winter CES in 1982. It was the first CD player I ever saw. I kept it because its so nicely made (reminds me more of a 1950's Germen camera than it does of a hi-fi component) and so pretty. It still works. Look at (and listen?) to one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJmkMOW1Gfk |
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