Why didn't DAT tape decks succeed in the market?


I placed my DAT deck back into my system and it sounds great. Vinyl recorded to DAT tape somehow sounds better than the record. Any views others can share?
nkonor
 Recordable compact disc players came out in the market about the same time I think.
DATs were well before recordable compact disc players. But there was never any significant (or any at all?) content for DAT commercially, so it would be only for recording vinyl. You couldn’t even record a CD to DAT because of the (breakable) copy protection.

DATs were considered pro pieces, IIRC mostly to record live shows. I had (still have) a DAT and it was fun to play with but you could really only use it as an upgrade from a cassette except you couldn’t buy any content, there were no cars with DAT players, and you couldn’t make mix tapes for others.

DATs were also 16/48 instead of 16/44 like CDs.  So there wasn't perfect compatibility in terms of digital dumps in either direction.  They were compatible natively with some computer cards.  If I recall correctly, the soundblasters were native 16/48.
My Tascam portable DAT that I recorded live shows with had both 16/44.1 and 16/48. Still have the deck and the live recordings but haven't used it in years.
Maybe it’s time to breakout the ol’ Tascam and load up some shows on the system and go down memory lane... I have a couple masters where my recording ended up being the one to get. Didn’t happen for me to many times—lol.