When I was in first year Radio-TV Arts at Ryerson in 1965, I landed a daily
program on what was then still the student-run station CJRT. Nobody listening,
and just typical FM easy listening music and minimal yakking. My father kindly
airchecked me every day. On the Philips. At 15/16. I could stand to listen to
about ten minutes of each show..it was quite a while before I realized that the
music didn't really sound that draggy..
dl
Steven C. Barr wrote:
>>
> Which reminded me of another problem which is/was fairly common on "home-
> use grade" cassettes...! While these machines usually run close enough
> to the
> standard 1-7/8 speed that cassettes don't sound noticeably "off-speed"..
> nevertheless, they DON'T all run at exactly the same speed! I found this
> out
> when usingt a different "dubbing" deck to copy a cassette originally
> recorded
> on a different tape deck; the reason I notice the "accumulated" speed
> difference
> (tape recorded on deck A, then dub-copied on deck B, and that tape played
> back on deck A again...!), is because I tried playing harmonica along
> with the
> resulting tape, and found it was no longer in the key of E (A harmonica,
> 2nd
> position) as the LP I had originally taped had been...?!
>
> Steven C. Barr
>
|