
February 10th 09, 07:56 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.tech
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Serious vinyl quality control problem?
Don Pearce wrote:
I was interested in how heavily modulated vinyl could be, so I popped
an old record (Long Hot Summer Night, Jimi Hendrix, Track Records
1968) under the microscope for a look. And what did I find? Two
adjacent grooves clearly broken into each other:
http://81.174.169.10/odds/grooves.jpg
Was this a really common back then, or is this kind of thing a rarity?
Hardly surprises me !
It's probably part of that allegedly sought-after 'vinyl sound'.
Graham
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February 11th 09, 07:52 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.tech
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Serious vinyl quality control problem?
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message
...
In article m,
David Nebenzahl wrote:
On 2/4/2009 9:10 AM Brian Gaff spake thus:
The worst I've encountered is the very audible signal from the
adjacent turn so to speak. I wonder what your sample had been played
on though.
What you're describing has nothing to do with vinyl; you're talking
about "print-through", which is an artifact of the tape mastering
machine feeding the cutter, where you can hear signals from adjacent
lengths of tape.
Dunno about the record industry but I would edit in leader tape to
remove any from the start of a track.
I think that was normal practice everywhere, except for places
that used the same tapes over and over again, but their material
was unlikely to go for cutting anyway.
Iain
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