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Re: [ARSCLIST] cassette crackle
Mr Biel,
I believe you have hit the nail on the head. I've looked back at all the 
recordings with constant crackle, they are all mono recordings, the 
clicking is always in the right channel. I have no information as to the 
equipment used to make the recordings, but everything you suggest 
matches so closely with what I'm experiencing, that I am confident that 
you are right.
Thanks also to Richard for his helpful suggestions for using declicking 
filters and to David Lennick for suggesting that I use only the Left 
channel.
The single channel seems like the easiest option, certainly in this 
instance it is the best option to take. (I've already made the transfers 
and returned the tapes.)
In future, is there anything that I can do at playback, to reduce or 
eliminate the problem - maybe a playback deck with a narrower head, or 
some other solution?
Michael Biel wrote:
David Lennick wrote:
Dumb question (for various reasons, I can't listen to the file at the 
moment). Were these cassettes all recorded on small mono portable 
machines? Tapes made on these almost always have a crackly or noisy 
right channel when played back on good decks and in stereo. The 
solution here is simply to play only the left channel.
dl
Mike Hirst wrote:
I have no information as to what equipment was used. However, it is my 
suspicion that small mono machines were used.
Maybe this proves that there is no such thing as a dumb question.  When 
we read that you were playing back the tapes on a stereo machine 
everyone seems to have assumed that the recordings were stereo.  Now 
that we know they are not, what you are hearing is what is on the guard 
band between the two mono tracks.  Remember that the right channel is 
the one closer to the center.  The left is at the edge.  There is a 
possibility that the mono track record head is slightly narrower than 
the width used by the split-track stereo head you are playing the tape 
on.  If the mono recorder the tape was made on was using either DC erase 
or just a magnet to erase the tape -- two techniques often used on cheap 
portables -- there WILL be crackle on parts of the tape that passed the 
erase head but did not pass the record head.  Often the erase head track 
is slightly wider than the record head width, or else the record head 
height was slightly off and it was recording slightly beyond the edge of 
the tape and not close enough to the center.
Mike Biel  mbiel@xxxxxxxxx
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Mike Hirst
Managing Director
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