$200 plus shipping? But with the Burnit do you need it? Happy to unload
it... even if I'll suddenly need it the day after sale!
Tell me, have you ever compared the SRC on the HHB with SRC in
computer, or via analog transfer? I am curious. I don't get that much
call, and the clients I see are not archival or audiophile and alwways
go away happy - and even come back 90% of the time!
Let me know if you are seriously interested.
Lou
Lou Judson • Intuitive Audio
415-883-2689
On Oct 3, 2005, at 8:12 PM, David Lennick wrote:
> How much?
>
> As for transferring, my HHB Burnit will automatically convert 48k to
> 44.1. The
> only 48s I've ever had have been some recorded at the CBC in the early
> DAT
> days. I don't know if they stayed with that or why they used it (was
> it because
> the BBC did?).
>
> dl
>
> Lou Judson wrote:
>
>> All the DATS I recorded (ten years worth) are at 44.1, and when a
>> client brings in a 48k DAT, I usually transfer analog to 44.1 because
>> it seems to come out just as well or better than a lengthy SRC in the
>> digital realm. Thought or comments?
>>
>> I have a Sony 2300 that works as well as the day it was new, a good
>> D-100, a 59ES that seemed to need heads last time I checked, and a
>> lowly Panasonic 3500. I've kept the 3500 just in case for a long time
>> now and never needed it - anyone looking for one?
>>
>> <L>
>> On Oct 3, 2005, at 5:04 PM, Richard L. Hess wrote:
>>
>>> Many of us in the tape restoration business are set up for digital
>>> DAT
>>> transfer as Tom Fine pointed out. One of the challenges is deciding
>>> what to do with 48 ks/s DATs. Do you save them as files or downsample
>>> to 44.1 ks/s for audio CDs. I guess the answer is partially, "it
>>> depends." Here's where a file system makes things easier. Perhaps the
>>> answer is "both."
>
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