-----Original Message-----From Richard L. Hess: "...The original question was for RIAA but there arefew RIAA discs that we should be transferring, even in Canada, as the true RIAA standard came into effect what, 55 years ago? I don't think it was adopted immediately, was it? I recall seeing London/Decca FFRR recordings (but maybe they were done with the RIAA curve and they just used the acronym for marketing) into the 1960s and perhaps the 1970s.
The RIAA is the trade group consisting of most record labels including all of the majors. Everybody agreed to adopt RCA's New Orthophonic curve as the RIAA curve. As far as I know it was quickly adopted because the need for different curves had become a serious problem for all labels. Virtually all mastering facilities calibrated their playback and cutting systems using the RCA New Orthophonic test disks. RCA also created the NAB disk but I never saw it used nearly as much as the original RCAs. Ideally one would calibrate a transfer channel using an RCA disk.
Bob Olhsson Audio Mastery, Nashville TN Mastering, Audio for Picture, Mix Evaluation and Quality Control Over 40 years making people sound better than they ever imagined! 615.385.8051 http://www.hyperback.com http://www.thewombforums.com