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.... but wanted to digitize this material from the tapes. Will be using a Macbook running Audio Hijack Pro (which allows me to record directly to Apple Lossless format) and a Behinger UCA202 sound card which gives me up to 16/48.Some of my questions:
Sound quality from any VHS tape is not HiFi at all. Why you want to go thru the hassle of a Lossless format?
Standard VHS recorded audio on a small linear track on the edge of the tape similar to cassettes, and would have to be considered relatively low fidelity. However tapes that were recorded with VHS HiFi, recorded audio on the video portion of the tape and were able to achieve ~ 70dB signal to noise and ~ 70dB channel separation.Through the late 80s and early 90s VHS HiFi was used by some (and myself) as an inexpensive alternative to reel-to-reel and DAT tapes with surprising good quality. Of course tapes recorded at the fastest 2 hour mode were superior to those recorded at the slowest 6 hour mode.So if the tapes were recorded in VHS HiFi and the source was decent quality, they may very well deserve digital archiving in an uncompressed lossless format.Steve
Hi.Sound quality from any VHS tape is not HiFi at all. Why you want to go thru the hassle of a Lossless format?c-J
Myself, I wouldn't be too worried about the hi-pass / lo-pass filtration. At least I've not yet noticed this as a problem on LP playback - are you hearing any of these problems on your VHS recordings?