Sony MDS-JB 930
Data
General
- Manufacturer: Sony
- Model: MDS-JB 930(b)
- Type: MD-Deck
- Years of manufacture: from June 1999
- Manufactured in: Malaysia
- Colour: Black, Champagne
- Remote control: Sony RM-D 33M
- Power consumption: approx. 18 W
- Dimensions: 430 x 110 x 287 mm (WxHxD)
- Weight: approx. 5.2 kg
- Original price approx.: 700 DM
Connections
- Number of inputs: 4
- analog In (impedance: 47 kOhm, signal voltage: 125-500 mV rms)
- 2 × digital optical In (wavelength 660 nm)
- digital coaxial In (impedance: 75 Ohm, signal voltage 0.5 V ±20 %)
- number of outputs: 3
- analog Out (impedance: >10 kOhm, signal voltage 2 V rms)
- digital optical Out (wavelength 660 nm, -18 dBm)
- digital coaxial Out (impedance: 75 Ohm, signal voltage: 0.5 V)
- Further connections:
- headphone out (impedance: 32 ohms, output power: 28 mW).
Control A1-II connector PS/2 keyboard connector
Specifications
- Laser: 44.6 µWatt GaAlAs semiconductor laser with 780nm wavelength
- Converter: 24 bit A/D converter
- Frequency response: 5-20,000 Hz ±0.3 dB
- Error correction: ACIRC (Advanced Cross Interleave Reed Solomon Code)
- Distortion factor: k. A.
- Signal-to-noise ratio: >100 dB during playback
- Dynamic range: n. A.
- Supported formats: MD
- Hi-MD support: no
- Anti-shock: n. A.
- Playback functions:
- Title programming: yes
Shuffle: yes Repeat: yes
- Recording functions:
- Recording modes: mono, stereo,
- Editing functions:
- Title name editable: yes
Delete: yes Move: yes
- Share: yes
- Connect: yes
Notes
Special Features
- Last MD deck outside the ES series to have a current-pulse D/A converter.
- Toroidal transformer in the power supply
- Connection of a PC keyboard with PS/2 connector possible, naming as well as control of the complete unit via keyboard possible
- Time Machine Recording (device continuously records the audio source in "recording pause" mode and then inserts the last 6 seconds before recording starts when recording starts).
- Devices produced before October 1999 seem to have a bug, so called "divide rehearsal bug".