Also, if I gave you a mixtape on CrO2 tape, I really liked you. I generally used name-brand, but cheapest, normal bias cassettes for mixtapes.

@Ellico2020bis
Oooooh mixtapes. I was a Maxell XLII-S/Denon HD8 person (TDK on occasion). All those amazing hours of planning and plotting!! I still plan my digital playlists to adhere to cassette running times of 60, 75, 100 or 120. Now I wanna make a mix tape.

@MPCavalier 4.5 years ago I bought a Denon Dolby S deck that I didn't need, then that pack of cassettes. I still haven't bothered to find out how Dolby S sounds. I paid like $37 for the deck, though, I had to.

@Ellico2020bis
Nice. I miss having all that gear. I went completely digital pretty early on. The only thing I have left is an old solid state pre-amp that sits between my mixer and my speakers to give everything a little more punch. Dolby-S, in theory, adds enough noise reduction to faithfully reproduce the sound of a CD. Never got a chance to try it though.

@MPCavalier @Ellico2020bis

Dolby could never address the restricted dynamic range, but they did OK for noise reduction. JVC had ANRS (automatic noise reduction system ) and
later Super ANRS, dbx had the only system that worked, but required expensive outboard devices, and dbx-encoded tapes were not compatible with non dbx decks.

fun times.

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@northernbassist @Ellico2020bis
Yeah. Another reason I converted! And my cassettes got a work out. From the home deck to the car to a walkman, they never maintained their initial sound for long.

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