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- From: Jonas.Palm@orgk3.lu.se (Jonas Palm)
- Newsgroups: rec.audio
- Subject: Re: Pioneer "Auto BLE" opinions?
- Message-ID: <Jonas.Palm-231292131513@fastpath-37.orgk2.lth.se>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 12:45:15 GMT
- References: <Jonas.Palm-221292162810@fastpath-37.orgk2.lth.se> <10626@vtserf.cc.vt.edu>
- Sender: news@pollux.lu.se (Owner of news files)
- Followup-To: rec.audio
- Organization: University of Lund, Sweden
- Lines: 67
- Nntp-Posting-Host: fastpath-37.orgk2.lth.se
-
- In article <10626@vtserf.cc.vt.edu>, ranck@joesbar.cc.vt.edu (Wm. L. Ranck)
- wrote:
- >
- > Jonas Palm (Jonas.Palm@orgk3.lu.se) wrote:
- > : In article <10583@vtserf.cc.vt.edu>, ranck@joesbar.cc.vt.edu (Wm. L. Ranck)
- > : wrote:
- > : > Does anyone have experience with the Pioneer "Auto BLE" type decks?
- > :
- > : It is _definitely_ worth having, especially if you haven't done calibration
- > : work before. I would never buy a cassette deck which didn't allow the
- > : user to calibrate it to different tape types easily.
- > :
- > Thanks for the information. Of the two decks I looked at one was "Auto BLE"
- > while the other was "Super Auto BLE". I was under the impression that the
- > "Super" variety was due to the deck having 3 heads so it could do the
- > adjustment in a single pass, but maybe I'm wrong there.
-
- I checked last night, and SABLE checks and adjusts the frequency response
- at 400, 3k, and 12kHz, whereas ABLE only checks 400 and 10kHz. With dual-
- layer tapes (TDK SA-X, Most of Fuji's offerings, BASF, etc.) this is a
- big win.
-
- As I said, there are different flavours of SABLE, growing more precise with
- price, but all are pretty good.
-
- > :
- > : Personally, I am wary of auto-reversing decks. (Nakamichi has shown that
- > : it can be done right, for ludicrous amounts of money.)
- > : Auto-reversing decks are _usually_ plagued by relatively unstable
- > : tape transports and azimuth errors in either or both directions.
- > : If you do not absolutely need this feature, I would recommend that you
- > : spend your money elsewhere.
- >
- > I share your distrust of auto-reverse, but it seems hard to find a deck in
- > that price range without it. I'm willing to listen to possible alternatives.
- > I'm still shopping and considering how long my last deck lasted I am willing
- > to take my time finding a new one.
- > Now if I can only find a shop that deals in Nakamichi . . .
- > --
- I have owned Nakamichi, they used to have great longevity, but some recent
- decks have seriously undermined my trust in them (plastic head assemblies,
- service tech. friends who tells of difficulties with keeping azimuth
- constant, etc.). They are also ridiculously overpriced.
- Last time I looked at them _none_ of them offered front panel
- adjustment of rec levels, which I consider a criminal oversight. For what I
- consider bogus reasons, no deck offers HX-PRO, and worse if they have
- high-end aspirations, no DOLBY-S.
- (If you really want a Nak, I'd recommend a CR-4. Pretty recent model with
- all essentials, _if_ you can get it cheaply. A Pioneer CT-41 Elite (US
- name)
- is a far better bet for approximately the same money.)
-
- The three-head Pioneer is a good alternative. Sony offers a three-head,
- dual capstan with bias and rec-level adjustments on the front for rather
- small money (TCK-590 or -690), and the Aiwa ADF-810 is justly considered
- a bargain offering the same features.
- If the deck doesn't use its meters in a special way for the calibration,
- you almost have to have a digital voltmeter (to get 10kHz AC response)
- and a CD with test signals.
-
- (Oh, and as I always add when I write about cassette decks on the net,
- if you do not have one, get a demagnetizer and use it. _You_ may not need
- that piece of advice, but I always grab the chance to spread the gospel.8-)
-
- Happy shopping!
-
- Jonas Palm
-