![]() |
Hi end vinyl system
Stewart Pinkerton wrote:
On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 22:43:53 +0100, ruffrecords wrote: Dersu wrote: "ruffrecords" wrote in message ... Unfortunately he lives in Miami and refuses to let me visit him to hear his sytem. As I mentioned eleswhere he says he has a $73,000 turntable and the rest of his sytem is of similar cost and he reckons you can definitely hear how much better his sytem is than a 5 to 10K one. Sounds to me like someone is having his plonker pulled by an aspiring Grand Master. Indeed - it also seems doubtful that this fabled system actually exists, since he refuses to be visited and won't supply pictures! Not just me but an entire yahoo group. Which group is that? reel2reel Ian |
Hi end vinyl system
"ruffrecords" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: "ruffrecords" wrote in message Already am. Having a disagreement with a guy on another group who reckons hi end vinyl sounds way better - I mean obviously better than CD. This is a well-known scam. You're supposed to believe him and pay 1,000's and 1,000's on a fruitless search for the holy grail of a vinyl playback system that actually sounds better than the audio section of a good $50US DVD player. Hopefully I am a tad smater than that - hence my desire to listen to a system localy. He suggested I should visit a hi-end hi-fi shop and listen to 5 to 10 grands worth of vinyl kit to hear what I have been missing, so that's what I intend to do. Only if your time is not worth very much to you... Well, I am retired, I do have an open mind and it is a long time since I heard a so called high end system. Ian Ian, As its a long time since you've heard a high end system and (if you have) plenty of time being retired then I'd suggest you don't rush into a purchase. Don't just visit 'a' hi-end shop..... Listen to as many high end systems as you can of both retailers and private systems to get some idea of what a good high end system can sound like. Remember most owners think their system are the bees knees...some are and some are not! I know I was 12 years in the business. Include your listening room into the equation and be sure to get lengthy home dems and don't be railroaded into anything if its not what you want (some dealers in mind here ;-) Happy hunting. Mike |
Hi end vinyl system
Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , ruffrecords wrote: Dersu wrote: Not just me but an entire yahoo group. Lot's of us have argued with him but he has that annoying habit of passing off his opinions as fact. The fact that his total system cost around $250,000 makes it for anyone else to say 'I heard one of those and it sucks' So try "Well since you are describing a system without offerring any way to test your claims, we can't be bothered to take you seriously." Then simply ignore any assertions he makes until such time as he offers to back them up in a way you can use to test his claims. Trolls eventually starve if left alone. :-) After pressing him to let me go listen to his system he said there was no need and any 5 to 10K vinyl system would be obviously superior to and CD system so I should go to my local hi-fi shop and hear one. If he knows this, he can specify a system that meets his criteria. If 'any' will then he should find this easy enough if he has any clue. :-) I would love to do this and be able to go back and say, I did that and it still sounded crap. Hence the original question. If he won't specify a system, then you can't listen to what he specifies. Hence his claims are void of any practical meaning. His claims are the information theory equivalent of random noise. This can be irritating when you want a meaningful message, but you won't get far by trying to listen to random noise and 'read meanings' into it. :-) Life is too short. Ignore him and enjoy the music. Spend your money on more music - LP or CD or DVD or whatever you prefer. :-) Slainte, Jim I agree with all you say. The silly thing is the yahoo group concerned is for reel to reel tape recorder enthusiasts. Occasionaly someone talks about transfering vinyl to tape and that's the cue for this guy to pop up and say vinyl is best. On a group with about 1000 members he's bound to get someone who'll disagree and a whole bunch of bandwidth gets wasted for a few days and even it drives away a few members. This happens perhpas every three months or so. His argument is always the same - go listen to a high end vinyl system and see the error of your ways. As we are all reel to reel enthusiasts no-one has a high end vinyl system so he is fairly safe. As with many such people he states opinions as if they were facts and as none of us has heard a high vinyl system its hard to just say he is talking crap. So all I want to do is go listen to a good 5 to 10K vinyl system so that next time I can say he is talking crap. Anyway, it would be nice to know just what the state of the art vinyl sounds like for my own personal edification. Ian |
Hi end vinyl system
Mike Gilmour wrote:
"ruffrecords" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: "ruffrecords" wrote in message Already am. Having a disagreement with a guy on another group who reckons hi end vinyl sounds way better - I mean obviously better than CD. This is a well-known scam. You're supposed to believe him and pay 1,000's and 1,000's on a fruitless search for the holy grail of a vinyl playback system that actually sounds better than the audio section of a good $50US DVD player. Hopefully I am a tad smater than that - hence my desire to listen to a system localy. He suggested I should visit a hi-end hi-fi shop and listen to 5 to 10 grands worth of vinyl kit to hear what I have been missing, so that's what I intend to do. Only if your time is not worth very much to you... Well, I am retired, I do have an open mind and it is a long time since I heard a so called high end system. Ian Ian, As its a long time since you've heard a high end system and (if you have) plenty of time being retired then I'd suggest you don't rush into a purchase. Don't just visit 'a' hi-end shop..... Listen to as many high end systems as you can of both retailers and private systems to get some idea of what a good high end system can sound like. That's exactly what I planned to do. I mainly just want to listen to a few to see if there is any basis at all to his claims. Only if it really is absolutely astonishingly better than anything else will I consider a purchase. IAn |
Hi end vinyl system
"Mike Gilmour" wrote in message ... : : "ruffrecords" wrote in message : ... : Arny Krueger wrote: : "ruffrecords" wrote in message : : : : Already am. Having a disagreement with a guy on another group who : reckons hi end vinyl sounds way better - I mean obviously better than : CD. : : : This is a well-known scam. You're supposed to believe him and pay : 1,000's and 1,000's on a fruitless search for the holy grail of a vinyl : playback system that actually sounds better than the audio section of a : good $50US DVD player. : : Hopefully I am a tad smater than that - hence my desire to listen to a : system localy. : : : He suggested I should visit a hi-end hi-fi shop and listen to 5 : to 10 grands worth of vinyl kit to hear what I have been missing, so : that's what I intend to do. : : : Only if your time is not worth very much to you... : : : Well, I am retired, I do have an open mind and it is a long time since I : heard a so called high end system. : : Ian : : Ian, : : As its a long time since you've heard a high end system and (if you have) : plenty of time being retired then I'd suggest you don't rush into a : purchase. Don't just visit 'a' hi-end shop..... Listen to as many high end : systems as you can of both retailers and private systems to get some idea of : what a good high end system can sound like. Remember most owners think : their system are the bees knees...some are and some are not! I know I was 12 : years in the business. Include your listening room into the equation and be : sure to get lengthy home dems and don't be railroaded into anything if its : not what you want (some dealers in mind here ;-) : Happy hunting. : : Mike : I agree with all of this, and I'd add that you're getting in to serious dimishing returns territory over £500 for a turntable/arm/cart. To add some fuel to the underlying challenge, I transferred some vinyl to (Revox) r2r years ago and the results were stunning, I really couldn't tell the difference. I find LP-CD transfers pretty good too. Rob |
Hi end vinyl system
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , ruffrecords wrote: Having a disagreement with a guy on another group who reckons hi end vinyl sounds way better - I mean obviously better than CD. He suggested I should visit a hi-end hi-fi shop and listen to 5 to 10 grands worth of vinyl kit to hear waht I have been missing, so that's waht I intend to do. Standard argument from someone who doesn't know what they're on about - find a more expensive xxxx Well, those who spend silly money rationalise their decision on the back of various technicist babble. That and weird kudos and sense-of-well-being motivators. No vinyl system can ever sound as good as CD - as a principle. Nonsense - there is no *universal* principle of 'sounds as good' Certain records may sound 'better' than certain CDs, but that's for different reasons. Yes There's an easy test for this. Transfer - using the best possible equipment - an LP to CD. Ask the golden eared boys to tell which is which in a blind test. They won't be able to. And I'll put serious money up for a bet if someone wants to try. But they'll have to equal it. I think a lot of people will tell the difference. IME acoustic instruments and voice sound noticeably different. As to whether one is better than the other, I don't think there's any answer to that. I'm not that concerned about proving this to you, so hold on to your money Dave :-). Do the same in reverse. Much more difficult, of course. But it can be done. Anyone with quarter decent hearing will tell the difference. As above -- Rob |
Hi end vinyl system
In article ,
Rob wrote: To add some fuel to the underlying challenge, I transferred some vinyl to (Revox) r2r years ago and the results were stunning, I really couldn't tell the difference. I find LP-CD transfers pretty good too. Some years ago, most LPs were mastered on 1/4" tape - and perhaps another generation of multitrack before that. So the main degradation to the 'studio' signal that tape introduces had already occurred. If you transfer a direct cut or digitally mastered LP to 1/4", you're likely to hear the difference more readily. -- *If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Hi end vinyl system
In article ,
Rob wrote: No vinyl system can ever sound as good as CD - as a principle. Nonsense - there is no *universal* principle of 'sounds as good' There is to some - and that includes me. That is that the recording should sound as close to the original as possible. And neither LP or analogue tape comes near good digital in this respect. You may well like the degradation that LP or tape introduces. That's your choice. Many prefer their widescreen TV to distort 4:3 pictures to fill the screen too. And consider that 'better' ;-) -- *Marriage changes passion - suddenly you're in bed with a relative* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Hi end vinyl system
"ruffrecords" wrote in message
I don't want to repeat the entire argument but this guy lives in Miami and claims to have a $73,000 turtable and similarly expensive other components. More money than brains... Despite that, he argues that any vinyl based system in the $5K to $10K range will 'blow away' any CD system of any kind and that the differences will be so noticeable as to be obvious. The difference will be obvious. For reference purposes, the vinyl system is the one with tics, pops, and other forms of audible noise and distortion. The good CD system is the one that provides an audibly perfect replica of the signal that was recorded. As to 'better' as you might expect this has been debated at length. Some people are addicted to the audible noise and distortion that is inherent in the vinyl format. In summary it comes down to instruments sounding more like the real thing, and of course he claims extensive and regular exposure to what the real thing sounds like. That's why 99% sales of new recordings are CDs, not LPs. They sound less like music than LPs. He further claims that tremendous technological advances have been made in vinyl reproduction technology in the last 30 years so mit now sounds better than any of us old lags would have remembered hearing back in its heyday in the 70's. Actually, very little has changed. The last major technological change in vinyl production was Direct Metal Mastering, and by most accounts, it was not an unqualified improvement. The last major technological change in vinyl playback was either laser tracking or digital denoising, and by most accounts they are not unqualified improvements, either. Oh, and by the way, you can only achieve this incredible level of quality by playing one of a few direct to disk records still in circulation and of which any really decent hi-fi shop will have a few. Direct-to-disk was an improvement because it eliminated the tape record/playback cycle which is in fact not sonically transparent. However, digital recording and production can provide identical benefits and greatly ease the production process. |
Hi end vinyl system
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "ruffrecords" wrote in message Clip... That's why 99% sales of new recordings are CDs, not LPs. They sound less like music than LPs. Freudian slip perhaps :-) |
All times are GMT. The time now is 02:30 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk