Raul writes:Dear friends: IMHO D2D must be the only way to make LP recordings but this is more easy to tell than to do it for any LP manufacturer.
I own several/many D2D recordings coming from diferent LP labels, including " modern " ones by Acoustic Sounds. ) and till today no one of those labels are near of almost all the Sheffield Labs D2D quality level " performance ".
The D2D recording process is really a continuous " over stress " for all the people involved with because the recording is live with out the facilities that gives the tape to edit the recording in any way and I suppose that not all recording engineers have not only the knowledge level but skills like SL.
Tape decks ( any ) is always a limitation in the recording process. I own all the D2D SL and own too the samples made it from the tape deck/master tapes and even that are very good can’t compare in any way to its " brother " D2D sample.
As I posted in the thread there are many limitations in the overall recording process, the tape deck is one of those limitations.
Regards and enjoy the music,
R.
And I think the Sheffields D2D are about as overrated a label as they come. Sheffields have some real significant sonic issues. CC or M&K D2D leave the Sheffields in the dust. Perhaps the best sounding D2D released is George Cardas’ Kip Dobler recording. I also have some never released Ken Kreisel M&K LPs pre-D2D that would blow your mind.
Also pray tell what tape deck you used in your system and what 15 ips tapes you used in your comparison? There’s a big difference between theory and reality.