Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
The library at school has several instructional audio cassettes they
lend out. Several of these tapes have become somewhat garbled, fading in and out and echo-ing. The library staff claims that this is because someone has attempted to copy the cassettes. I say this is hogwash, as I am unaware of any schemes for copy-protecting audio cassettes -especially that would destroy the source recording! I'm an electrical engineer and a recording hobbyist. Am I simply ignorant of the methods? If I'm right, what is the most likely explanation for this type of damage? Heat? Magnetic destruction? Wear? Just playing the tapes on the cheap crappy magnetized cassette decks that most people use will induce the afore-mentioned problems very quickly. Copying the tapes will not have any worse effect. Storage can cause a lot of problems also. Magnetic fields heat, and humdity alr all deleterious to tape. Richard H. Kuschel "I canna change the law of physics."-----Scotty |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
"Copy Control Technology"...??? bad cd audio | Pro Audio | |||
science vs. pseudo-science | High End Audio | |||
Copy protected audio CDs | Pro Audio | |||
Why DBTs in audio do not deliver (was: Finally ... The Furutech CD-do-something) | High End Audio | |||
New Audio Editing Software, Dexster | Pro Audio |