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#1 | |||
Blu-ray Samurai
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#2 | |
Active Member
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When does playing vinyl become a fetish? I love playing vinyl. At well over 2,000 LPs, 3,000 78s and over 1,000 45's I have far more records than CD's. I clean them with a record cleaning machine and play them on my two Technics DD turntables, both well regarded and one, the SP-15, considered a professional turntable. I connect them to a vintage NAD pre-amp that has a legendary phono pre-amp stage. I have some well recorded and mastered LP's that truly sound remarkable. Generally speaking, though, the average LP hardly ever sounds as good as, and almost never better than the average CD. You can argue that I'm constrained by my modest playback chain and I'll be the first to admit I might be able to get a better sound by investing in some substantially more expensive equipment, but I just can't afford to go OCD on vinyl playback. I'm talking about more than money. I'm more interested in sitting down and listening to the music instead of spending as much, if not more time futzing around with the equipment and the preparation. Let's consider "the great unwashed". While I think there may have been more hi-fi enthusiasts in the past, they still made up a very small percentage of the general listening public. Most folks listened to vinyl on a portable player or one of those console monstrosities made by Zenith or RCA. I knew very few families when I was growing up that had a component system like we did and it took me a while to realize we were the odd man out. The average man's modern counterpart is listening to a far better quality audio now with their CD's or even (gasp!) MP3's than those who played records. Finally, since we're on a more Home Theater oriented site, I'll mention the sound from blu-rays. Nothing in my youth of the '50's and '60's comes anywher close to the sound quality available on blu-ray and even DVD's. I've watched a fair number of concerts, both rock and classical, and I'm astounded how good they sound on my mid line Home Theater setup. For someone who enjoys music of all types, this is a great time. I'll listen to my 78's, 45's, LP's, CD's, SACD's, DVD Audio, DVD's, Blu-Rays and even MP3's and thoroughly enjoy myself. I won't look down my nose at any format and won't spend inordinate amounts of time defending one over the other. I've got to run, there's a song that needs to be heard. |
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#3 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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And I'm with you when it comes to sitting down and listening. I'm not sure of this futzing around to which you refer. Remove record carefully from sleeve, give it a quick clean with a carbon fibre brush, clean stylus, play record. It almost takes longer to type that than do it! |
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#4 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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The function of a home turntable is to spin the record at a consistent and accurate speed without generating vibration into the tonearm. You don't have to spend the price of a car to do that. Some people think only a belt driven turntable can do that, but I don't sense any vibration from the quartz motor and direct drive of this turntable. This turntable replaced a belt-driven AR Turntable some decades ago - I couldn't stand the lack of torgue. Anything else is smoke and mirrors, in my subjective opinion. (I'm an ex-recording engineer, just for the record.) As for the tonearm, the purpose is to put the cartridge in a position so that it can track accurately and not negatively influence the tracking, aside from providing the proper weight, and aside from anti-skating. And also to avoid microphonics and hum. Having said that, I could be somewhat convinced if I heard a system that sounds "better" and I will admit to not having heard an ultra high-end reference system in quite some time. I am using a Kenwood turntable (Yes, I know Kenwood was not known for turntables, but this particular turntable attracted my attention because it had a very heavy artifical marble-like base) with a Stanton 681EEE cartridge into an Apt-Holman preamp (with Crown power amps and DCM Time Window speakers.) I am actually looking to replace the Apt, Crown and speakers with a new system, but so far, I haven't actually heard anything that sounds better in a reasonably priced system. (That's another topic.) I'm not interested in getting into a subectivist vs. objectivist argument. If you (universal "you") have the cash and are happy spending $10K or more on a turntable, arm, cartridge, preamp and stand, more power to you. Or if you think that $800 cables make a difference, great. At least it helps the economy. But let's not make the assumption that money necessarily buys better sound. It only necessarily buys aesthetics, style, uniqueness and pride of ownership. |
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