ColinLovesMusic
New member
lindsayt said:TrevC said:lindsayt said:TrevC said:CD is actually the best source. Reel to reel at what speed for second place?
In your house maybe. In mine it's not.
What sort of a reel to reel tape machine do you own and what sort of CD player?
I own a Studer A807 tape machine and a couple of Denon CD players.
7.5 and 15 ips 1/4 inch 2 track tapes sound better than vinyl and CD in my system.
You think LPs sound better than CD, so perhaps you are mixing better and worse up. I'm talking about the format, not my own equipment, but for your information at the moment I'm using a vintage Philips CD 850 MkII. I had a Revox once but no longer own a reel to reel, but I know that all the commercially available tapes were recorded at 3 3/4 ips, so what music are you listening to?
TrevC, your statement is incorrect. I don't think that LP's sound better than CD's in my system. I know.
Your statement that perhaps I am mixing better and worse up is so wide of the mark, it's not even in the same postcode (as the Mighty Jingles would say).
The proof of the pudding is in the eating. When it comes to CD's it's a relatively stale pudding in my system.
So you "know that all the commercially available tapes were recorded at 3 3/4 ips"?
Well check this out:
http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_odkw=&_osacat=618&_from=R40&_trksid=p204...
Well done, that's 3 incorrect statements that you've made in 3 sentences.
Best and worst depends on the person and the system as much as anything and what is it in the reproduction any one person is listening out for. But I think the general consensus amongst hifi enthusiasts is that vinyl has the potential to sound better but it does take a hell of a good turntable/arm/cart and set up to achieve it. Whereas a cheap even very cheap CD player will sound vastly superior to a cheap or very cheap turntable. So it must be down to what end of the market people are buying at (Budget end for me). Reason is probably because anything hitech can be manufactered very cheaply whereas a good turntable relies on the finest engineering and build as well as a touch of 'Foo' and the black art of hifi that defies technical measurement. I love vinyl and do appreciate the depth, ambience, resonance and deeply layered sound vinyl creates. I can forgive the surface noise and listen through it. Mechanical it is and a victim to variables such as some of my recent vinyl purchases don't seem to have the hole in the middle which defeats the point of having a turntable with rock solid pitch.