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Re: [ARSCLIST] Dolby B, et al and now ANRS
If I remember correctly, ANRS was proprietary to JVC and was somewhat Dolby B compatible although I
think it was some way JVC worked around Dolby patents. I forgot if JVC decks from that era had ANRS
and Dolby B. The only definitive answer will come from someone who has been around a while in JVC's
engineering department. Perhaps start with the Tokyo AES chapter?
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message -----
From: "Richard L. Hess" <arclists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, October 26, 2007 11:24 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Dolby B, et al and now ANRS
Peter,
If you had a broken ANRS deck if the circuitry still worked or could be salvaged you could wire it
as an external processor as long as you took care with levels, etc. Might take some reverse
engineering, but that is one way to go.
I did a quick Google search and some claims about Dolby compatibility are floating around, but
other claims of it sounding better than Dolby doesn't make sense. I didn't find anything
definitive. YICK another NR system to factor in. That increases the permutations by some number
around 100!
Cheers,
Richard
Richard L. Hess email: richard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Aurora, Ontario, Canada (905) 713 6733 1-877-TAPE-FIX
Detailed contact information: http://www.richardhess.com/tape/contact.htm
Quality tape transfers -- even from hard-to-play tapes.