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- From: scott@psy.uwa.oz.au (Scott Fisher)
- Newsgroups: rec.audio
- Subject: Sony Scoopman NT-1 was Re: DAT, DCC and MD
- Date: 28 Jan 1993 02:57:30 GMT
- Organization: The University of Western Australia
- Lines: 82
- Message-ID: <1k7i2qINNd94@uniwa.uwa.edu.au>
- References: <1993Jan20.165333.1241@cmkrnl.com> <106062@netnews.upenn.edu> <1993Jan25.183723.3085@e2big.mko.dec.com> <1993Jan27.030152.6069@labtam.labtam.oz.au>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: wapsy.psy.uwa.oz.au
-
- graeme@labtam.labtam.oz.au (Graeme Gill) writes:
-
- >In article <C1EuKp.3wq@fulcrum.co.uk>, igb@fulcrum.co.uk (Ian G Batten) writes:
- >|>Au contraire, VCR technology is expensive. Cheap, nasty cassette
- >|>players cost ten pounds. DCC's only expense over a grungy cassette
- >|>mechanism is the head, which isn't a moving part but is more complex
- >|>than a standard analogue head. But in the digital domain problems like
- >|>wow and flutter can be addressed by buffering, and high mechanical
- >|>accuracy is what costs money.
-
- > I came across an article recently from Sony in which they describe
- >a play only DAT mechanism that uses a non-tracking technique combined with
- >memory buffering. By "non-tracking" they mean that the play head doesn't
- >track the helical tracks but may read them at a slight angle, and may read
- >the same track several times. As a result they don't need a fancy rotating
- >head motor, and mechanical tolerances need not be as fine. They
- >claim this design leads to a low cost, low power consumption mechanism
- >that is very rugged. It is intended for car DAT players and walkermans.
-
- I have the Feburary issue of Electronics Australia in front of me as I type.
- It reviews the Sony NT-1 Scoopman...
-
- Specs: (Test data..not factory claims)
-
- Frequency Response: 10Hz - 14.5 kHz (+/- 0.1db)
- 2Hz - 14.6 kHz (=/-3dB)
-
- Dynamic range: 75dB unweighted
- 80dB (A)
-
- Channel Separation: 20Hz = -80dB
- 1K = -78dB
- 10kHz = -70dB
-
- THD:
- Level THD
- 3.0V 0.12
- 2.0V 0.10
- (0dB) 0.5V 0.09
- -2.0dB 0.07
- -4.0dB 0.06
- -6.0dB 0.05
- -10dB 0.03
- -20dB 0.04
- -30dB Below noise
-
- The cassette dimensions are 30mm x 21mm x 5mm, the tape comes in 60, 90 and 120
- minute lengths and is 2.5mm wide. The tape has two sides. The machine will
- record for 7 hours on a single AA battery. It's stereo sampling at 32 kHz with
- 12 bit non-linear quantisation.
-
- The rotating head mechanism works something like this...
-
- With a direct drive 4 head head drum of 14.8mm diameter the machine records on
- 1/2 the tape width (2 sides remember) for a total track width of 1mm.
-
- The NT in NT-1 stands for Non Tracking...basically the rotating head is pushed
- into the cassette shell (in the same way a convetional tape deck pushes it's
- heat into the tape) and all the tape guides etc are built into the cassette.
- Just imagine your compact cassette has a rotating head in place of the fixed
- one it has now. When the head pushes into the casette the tape is wrapped
- around the drum. The machine reads at 2X recording speed...this causes the
- machine to read the same tracks twice on playback. Each track (angled
- stripe across the tape) contains 104 data blocks.
-
- According to the reviewer the quality of recorded CD's was "astounding."
- He suggested that he had a hard time picking the difference between the CD and
- the NT-1 recording (he did mention that he must be getting old :-)
-
- Regards Scott
- _______________________________________________________________________________
- Scott Fisher [scott@psy.uwa.oz.au] PH: Aus [61] Perth (09) Local (380 3272).
- _--_|\ N
- Department of Psychology / \ W + E
- University of Western Australia. Perth [32S, 116E]--> *_.--._/ S
- Nedlands, 6009. PERTH, W.A. v
-
- Joy is a Jaguar XJ6 with a flat battery, a blown oil seal and an unsympathetic
- wife, 9km outside of a small remote town, 3:15am on a cold wet winters morning.
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