Hello.

 

I look for a solution. I have old cassette tapes and some have been made
using Dolby C correction. Sadly, they were not all recorded with the
same deck and I don't have those anymore. Dolby being very picky under
some conditions, especially a correct level BEFORE getting  into the
decoder, I consider it could be a good idea to bypass my dolby C
correction on my new tape deck, record into a computer and then apply
correct correction - with the ability to adjust level before correction
(through a process of cut and try I don't despair to obtain a not so
bad, often 'muffled' sound I obtain with my nowadays system) . Shame,
the dolby c correction is somewhat complicated (sweeping frequency
filter(s), level and harmonic dependence, and so on  - www.dolby.com
<http://www.dolby.com/>  are quite informative about the very clever
system they created).

 

(Btw: it is because it is complicated It worked well under certain
conditions only. It is also for improving compatibility they later
invented Dolby S (improved mechanism of a more transparent coding)).

 

I don't know it there is a kind of plugin and/or program that can do
that...

 

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