
December 27th 07, 06:47 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
CDs have a clarity to the sound that beats even the best LPs.
David.
In most I would agree. Some CDs are remarkably better, it's amazing what you
can hear on some compared to the vinyl equivalent. For me tho' clarity alone
does not make CD a prefered format.
As much as I play CDs now I still find vinyl very alluring & involving. A
good recording can have me almost mesmerized.
Steve
|

December 30th 07, 02:05 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Stevie Boy" wrote in message
...
CDs have a clarity to the sound that beats even the best LPs.
David.
In most I would agree. Some CDs are remarkably better, it's amazing what
you can hear on some compared to the vinyl equivalent. For me tho' clarity
alone does not make CD a prefered format.
As much as I play CDs now I still find vinyl very alluring & involving. A
good recording can have me almost mesmerized.
OK, that's an interesting statement - what do you think of these
near-identical clips (one CD, the other vinyl)?
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/MilesA.mp3
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/MilesB.mp3
Do you have a clear preference?
|

December 30th 07, 11:34 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
Keith G" wrote in message
...
"Stevie Boy" wrote in message
...
CDs have a clarity to the sound that beats even the best LPs.
David.
In most I would agree. Some CDs are remarkably better, it's amazing what
you can hear on some compared to the vinyl equivalent. For me tho'
clarity alone does not make CD a prefered format.
As much as I play CDs now I still find vinyl very alluring & involving. A
good recording can have me almost mesmerized.
OK, that's an interesting statement - what do you think of these
near-identical clips (one CD, the other vinyl)?
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/MilesA.mp3
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/MilesB.mp3
Do you have a clear preference?
Miles A is a lot cleaner, much lower distortion on the highs, so I assume it
to be the CD. Sounds much nicer to me.Miles B is also a fair bit louder and
sounds compressed in comparison with A. Interestingly, the frequency
spectrum of A cuts off very rapidly at 16k whilst B goes on to 21k. I assume
therefore that A is CD, and the relatively limited bandwidth is a function
of the original tapes, whilt B is vinyl, and the very top is just noise.
S.
http://audiopages.googlepages.com
|

December 30th 07, 01:44 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Serge Auckland" wrote in message
...
Keith G" wrote
OK, that's an interesting statement - what do you think of these
near-identical clips (one CD, the other vinyl)?
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/MilesA.mp3
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/MilesB.mp3
Do you have a clear preference?
Miles A is a lot cleaner, much lower distortion on the highs, so I assume
it to be the CD. Sounds much nicer to me.Miles B is also a fair bit louder
and sounds compressed in comparison with A. Interestingly, the frequency
spectrum of A cuts off very rapidly at 16k whilst B goes on to 21k. I
assume therefore that A is CD, and the relatively limited bandwidth is a
function of the original tapes, whilt B is vinyl, and the very top is just
noise.
You are right - A is the CD. (I 'normalised' both those clips to -16 dB and
that's what comes out - Gawd knows what's going on in the software!) Also,
the vinyl clip was my first attempt at recording to this (Vista) laptop and
it was a nightmare!
The CD clip exhibits the 'clarity' (lack of noise floor) that is often
associated with CD, but it simply sounds *shouty* to me and the percussion
is brittle when compared with the vinyl. Disregarding *measurements* for
this purpose and using only my ears, once again, I prefer the vinyl (what
new?) by, er, *miles*!! (Oops :-)
Ya pays yer money....
(Except in this case I did for *both* the CD and LP....!! ;-)
|

December 30th 07, 02:14 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Keith G" wrote in message
...
"Serge Auckland" wrote in message
...
Keith G" wrote
OK, that's an interesting statement - what do you think of these
near-identical clips (one CD, the other vinyl)?
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/MilesA.mp3
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/MilesB.mp3
Do you have a clear preference?
Miles A is a lot cleaner, much lower distortion on the highs, so I assume
it to be the CD. Sounds much nicer to me.Miles B is also a fair bit
louder and sounds compressed in comparison with A. Interestingly, the
frequency spectrum of A cuts off very rapidly at 16k whilst B goes on to
21k. I assume therefore that A is CD, and the relatively limited
bandwidth is a function of the original tapes, whilt B is vinyl, and the
very top is just noise.
You are right - A is the CD. (I 'normalised' both those clips to -16 dB
and that's what comes out - Gawd knows what's going on in the software!)
Also, the vinyl clip was my first attempt at recording to this (Vista)
laptop and it was a nightmare!
I think you'll find they were normalised to -1dBFS, at least, that's what my
software shows.
The CD clip exhibits the 'clarity' (lack of noise floor) that is often
associated with CD, but it simply sounds *shouty* to me and the percussion
is brittle when compared with the vinyl. Disregarding *measurements* for
this purpose and using only my ears, once again, I prefer the vinyl (what
new?) by, er, *miles*!! (Oops :-)
Strange isn't it, it's B that sounds "shouty" to me, especially the
roughness with highs.
Ya pays yer money....
(Except in this case I did for *both* the CD and LP....!! ;-)
Indeed.
S.
--
http://audiopages.googlepages.com
|

December 30th 07, 03:12 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Serge Auckland" wrote
The CD clip exhibits the 'clarity' (lack of noise floor) that is often
associated with CD, but it simply sounds *shouty* to me and the
percussion is brittle when compared with the vinyl. Disregarding
*measurements* for this purpose and using only my ears, once again, I
prefer the vinyl (what new?) by, er, *miles*!! (Oops :-)
Strange isn't it, it's B that sounds "shouty" to me, especially the
roughness with highs.
The bass is also somewhat recessed on the CD version which is what makes it
'shouty' to me, but I've trimmed the clips down:
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/SmallMilesA.mp3
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/SmallMilesB.mp3
.....to enable more direct comparisons to be made and, if anything, the CD is
more shouty than ever and completely lacking in 'texture' - by comparison to
the vinyl, which is why I consider CD to be less *natural* and certainly
less 'listenable'!
(I guess one man's 'texture' is another man's *noise*....?? :-)
|

December 30th 07, 03:31 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Keith G" wrote in message
...
"Serge Auckland" wrote
The CD clip exhibits the 'clarity' (lack of noise floor) that is often
associated with CD, but it simply sounds *shouty* to me and the
percussion is brittle when compared with the vinyl. Disregarding
*measurements* for this purpose and using only my ears, once again, I
prefer the vinyl (what new?) by, er, *miles*!! (Oops :-)
Strange isn't it, it's B that sounds "shouty" to me, especially the
roughness with highs.
The bass is also somewhat recessed on the CD version which is what makes
it 'shouty' to me, but I've trimmed the clips down:
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/SmallMilesA.mp3
http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/SmallMilesB.mp3
....to enable more direct comparisons to be made and, if anything, the CD
is more shouty than ever and completely lacking in 'texture' - by
comparison to the vinyl, which is why I consider CD to be less *natural*
and certainly less 'listenable'!
(I guess one man's 'texture' is another man's *noise*....?? :-)
Exactly the other way round for me! A is clean, B is coloured (shouty isn't
a bad way of describing it) I suppose your texture is my coloration. By the
way, what cartridge did you use for the vinyl? I would guess an AT95 or
similar.
S.
--
http://audiopages.googlepages.com
|
Thread Tools |
|
Display Modes |
Hybrid Mode
|
|