Symptom | Cause |
|
|
Track marks | When the data of a track is fragmented, the track |
cannot be erased. | mark of a fragment under 12 seconds long |
The remaining | (recorded in stereo), 24 seconds long (recorded |
recording time | in monaural or LP2 mode), or 48 seconds long |
does not increase | (recorded in LP4 mode) cannot be erased. You |
even after | cannot combine a track recorded in different |
erasing | recording mode, e.g., a track recorded in stereo |
numerous short | and a track recorded in monaural; nor can you |
tracks. | combine a track recorded with digital |
| connection and a track recorded with analog |
| connection. |
| Tracks of under 12 seconds, 24 seconds, or 48 |
| seconds in length are not counted and so erasing |
| them may not lead to an increase in the |
| recording time. |
|
|
The total | Normally, recording is done in minimum units |
recorded time | of approximately 2 seconds (in stereo), 4 |
and the | seconds (in monaural or LP2 mode), or 8 |
remaining time | seconds (in LP4 mode). When recording is |
on the disc may | stopped, the last unit of recording always uses |
not total the | this unit of 2 seconds, 4 seconds, or 8 seconds |
maximum | even if the actual recording is shorter. Likewise, |
recording time | when recording is restarted after the stop, the |
(60, 74, or 80 | recorder will automatically insert a blank space |
minutes). | amounting to 2 seconds, 4 seconds, or 8 seconds |
| before the next recording. (This is to prevent |
| accidental erasing of a previous track whenever |
| a new recording is started). Therefore, the actual |
| recording time will decrease whenever a |
| recording is stopped by a maximum of 6 |
| seconds, 12 seconds, or 24 seconds. |
|
|
The edited tracks | The fragmentation of data may cause sound |
may exhibit | dropout while searching because the tracks are |
sound dropout | played in higher speed than normal playback. |
during search |
|
operations. |
|
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