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Author Topic: Noise reduction for tape  (Read 2763 times)

ricknroll

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Noise reduction for tape
« on: April 28, 2004, 11:10:18 AM »

I'm interested in getting a couple channels of noise reduction for my recently acquired Revox PR99.  Do people prefer Dolby or DBX, and for those with a preference, which version (A, SR, etc.) do you think sounds better?

-Rick
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meverylame

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Re: Noise reduction for tape
« Reply #1 on: April 28, 2004, 02:46:14 PM »

I'm fairly new to the tape thing myself, but I've heard nothing but shit about the DBX units...
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Cheers!
Jason Kingsland

http://www.jasonruinsrecords.com

pacrec

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Re: Noise reduction for tape
« Reply #2 on: April 28, 2004, 02:56:45 PM »

I would look for a Dolby 363 SR.

Tim
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breathe

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Re: Noise reduction for tape
« Reply #3 on: April 29, 2004, 02:44:29 AM »

I've never used 'SR', but own a lot of records that have it.  It seems to put a bit of a blanket over the sound.  'A' is a totally different ball of wax.  It is thin (clenched bass especially), metally, and dynamically flat sounding.  Recordings that use this NR either fit aesthetically with the above described qualities (80's pop music), or were made in the 70's using huge sounding equipment that sort of balanced things out.  DBX on a 4-track sounds like shit, but on a 1" 16-track is a more transparent option than Dolby A.  The thing about DBX is that it's a full band compression-expansion system, so the tonality of the sound doesn't seem to get as skewed as with Dolby.  Regardless of what NR you use, don't be putting the tape in the red cause it brings out the worst in the NR.  Lower your deck's reference level by at least 3db according to tape stock.

The guy who wrote the fancy pantsy microphone book that came out a few years ago told me DBX NR was standard for classical 2-track masters before digital took over.


Nicholas
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