MD: Editing on the Aiwa's

2000-02-25 Thread Ed Heckman


Now that I know that I can't avoid the Sony R50's major drawback, I need 
to know about possible replacements.

One of the things I love about the R50 is how easy it makes editing stuff 
that's on the disc. Setting track marks, erasing tracks, moving tracks 
and setting titles are all dead simple operations. The reviews I've read 
of the Aiwas lead me to believe that their editing features are not as 
simple to use as the Sony's. Is this really the case? Or does it sound 
worse than it really is?



 Ed "What the" Heckman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: MD: Editing on the Aiwa's

2000-02-25 Thread Edmund Wong


 One of the things I love about the R50 is how easy it makes editing stuff
 that's on the disc. Setting track marks, erasing tracks, moving tracks
 and setting titles are all dead simple operations. The reviews I've read
 of the Aiwas lead me to believe that their editing features are not as
 simple to use as the Sony's. Is this really the case? Or does it sound
 worse than it really is?

This comes from my experience from using my Aiwa AM-F7.

Editing on the Aiwa is relatively simple. You slide the record "switch"
(it works like the "eject" switches ono many units) once while playing
to get into "edit" mode. Now, you can press "mode" until you get to the
function you want, press enter, and then perform the function.

Not cryptic by any stretch of imagination. Everything can be performed
during play.

Tell me if you want more dirty details.

- Ed. Another one. :)
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