Originally posted by: BrianM
I have one of those 70mm in theater recordings, I did one in San Diego and my wife did one in D.C. (long before we were married). Now THAT is the truest sign that two people are meant for each other I've EVER seen!!
Just bought a tape deck from e-bay. My old one died years ago and I never replaced it.
Anyway, once the new deck arrives what is the best way to digitize the audio?
BrianM
Hopefully some of the audio experts here can help you out on that. Since these are (I assume) open-air recordings, it probably won't matter all that much since it's mainly only useful for reference purposes. But it's still worth the time to get a good digital copy made of each, I think.I have one of those 70mm in theater recordings, I did one in San Diego and my wife did one in D.C. (long before we were married). Now THAT is the truest sign that two people are meant for each other I've EVER seen!!

She has found hers and I’m still digging for mine.
That is fantastic news. Not just one, but two copies! At the very least, this will give everyone a pretty good representation of what is and isn't in the 70mm mix.Just bought a tape deck from e-bay. My old one died years ago and I never replaced it.
Anyway, once the new deck arrives what is the best way to digitize the audio?
BrianM
--SKot