
October 13th 17, 02:20 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Crosley's top end record player
In article ,
Mike Fleming wrote:
Not entirely. Carefully controlled double-blind trials are acceptable.
So called "golden ears" are just a joke.
Surely not. After all, they can discern the difference between digital
interconnects, which mere mortals can't even measure.
Point is they can't. Ages ago, there was a substantial cash prize on offer
to anyone who could reliably tell the difference between 'ordinary'
interconnects and the high priced ones. In a proper double blind test.
No-one has won it. I'd guess many who say they can don't want to be proved
wrong. ;-)
--
*Santa Claus has the right idea. Visit people only once a year.
Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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October 13th 17, 02:33 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Crosley's top end record player
On Fri, 13 Oct 2017 15:20:03 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:
In article ,
Mike Fleming wrote:
Not entirely. Carefully controlled double-blind trials are acceptable.
So called "golden ears" are just a joke.
Surely not. After all, they can discern the difference between digital
interconnects, which mere mortals can't even measure.
Point is they can't. Ages ago, there was a substantial cash prize on offer
to anyone who could reliably tell the difference between 'ordinary'
interconnects and the high priced ones. In a proper double blind test.
No-one has won it. I'd guess many who say they can don't want to be proved
wrong. ;-)
Neither can they tell the difference between competent analogue
interconnects. I put this to the test years ago when I was at Pye
studios in Marble Arch. Someone had brought in some super-expensive
cables which I scoffed at. Anyway, long and the short is that I rigged
up a test, single rather than double blind. But nobody present -
engineers, and a producer included - could tell the difference.
d
---
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October 15th 17, 09:48 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Crosley's top end record player
In article , "Brian Gaff"
writes:
One thing that has always amazed me is that some shops have crap sound from
crap systems, while others seem to use stuff I'd never heard of and
remarkably get decent sound. I don't know ho Beng speakers are, but
considering they were only 790 quid a pair they sounded pretty good,
especially compared to the average crap bundled with these stereo systems
sold in the multiples these days. I have never seen them since though so
maybe they were bankrupt stock from a decent company I'd never heard of...
At 790 quid a pair, I'd hope they sounded exactly like the original.
Did a stray "0" creep in by any chance?
--
Mike Fleming
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October 17th 17, 05:45 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Crosley's top end record player
keskiviikko 11. lokakuuta 2017 19.29.47 UTC+3 Don Pearce kirjoitti:
On Wed, 11 Oct 2017 09:20:19 +0100, Adrian Caspersz
wrote:
Just spotted some rebranding going on, they know their limitations...
https://thevinylfactory.com/features...sley-c10-c100/
There is no such thing as top end with vinyl. Poor-to-middling is as
good as it is possible to get. It has built into it distortion levels
which, in an amplifier, would result in it being binned.
Bass response is limited by the need to limit groove amplitude in
recording, and by the necessary arm resonance at reproduction.
Treble response is limited by temperature rise in the cutting head.
In short, if you are interested in musical reproduction, forget it,
but if you just want to collect interesting technology make a bid. But
don't go over a tenner.
d
By the mid 50's Decca had an ffrr cutting head that followed RIAA within 0.5dB to 15kHz. The Neumann SX68 is (usually better than) +/- 1 dB 40Hz to 16kHz. In Decca trials, its successor the SX74 was -2dB at 22kHz ref RIAA. We had a test disc for internal use (cutting and listening rooms turntable/RIAA set ups) which had a glide tone 20Hz to 20kHz. Many Decca classical LPs were cut at half speed, so hf was not compromised.
The problem that Don mentions: "Treble response is limited by temperature rise in the cutting head" is solved by half speed cutting and/or cooling the cutter head with helium.
What is actually on the disc depended greatly on the skills of the cutting engineer. The object of the exercise is to cut an acetate master which is as close as possible to the original master tape. (Any fool can make it sound different-  ) Given the medium involved, and the expectations of producers and engineers, this is no easy task.
The general public used cheap turntables with doubtful stylii played records which were poorly looked after, and expected high fidelity. Budget labels, especially in the UK, used to punch out the centres of unsold and returned vinyl pressings to be recycled in the vinyl mix for subsequent production. The same matrices were used for over-extended runs pressing runs.
These days, now that vinyl and well and truly matured, people are willing to pay more for a quality product, and we are offered immaculate 180 gr pressings, pressed in very short runs before stamper renewal. On a goods vinyl rig, they sound wonderful. This, a 12inch gatefold sleeve and a booklet which one can read without a magnifying glass all add up to a quality product.
Interestingly, comparison of many non-classical parallel productions, CD and LP, often give listeners the idea that LP is in fact better, because they prefer what they hear. And due to the lack of compression, people often assume (eroniously) that vinyl has a greater dynamic range.
In A/B/C comparison, it is not unusual for people to conclude that the vinyl is closer to the master than the CD.
The principles of CD mastering are totally different to those of vinyl cutting. During the various steps of the mastering process, the CD quickly starts to sound noticeably different to the original digital recording, - which depending on your viewpoint, may, or may not be a good thing:-))
But trying to give the public what they think they want, is not without its problems.
Iain
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October 17th 17, 09:55 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Crosley's top end record player
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
scribeth thus
In article ,
Woody wrote:
Clearly you have never had the joy of listening to a direct cut disc
played on a good turntable with a moving coil cartridge into any sort
of reasonable system. It is a really something to behold.
I've had the joy of listening to the live sound in the control room where
it's being balanced/recorded. Only a good digital recording comes close to
that. Analogue tape never did, and any form of disc recording a very poor
second.
Old Stan Curtis has an interesting take on analogue recorders;!
And a few other audio topics.
http://www.stancurtis.com/PDFs/HiFi%20Critic%205.pdf
--
Tony Sayer
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October 18th 17, 07:31 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Crosley's top end record player
"tony sayer" wrote in message
news 
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
scribeth thus
In article ,
Woody wrote:
Clearly you have never had the joy of listening to a direct cut
disc
played on a good turntable with a moving coil cartridge into any
sort
of reasonable system. It is a really something to behold.
I've had the joy of listening to the live sound in the control room
where
it's being balanced/recorded. Only a good digital recording comes
close to
that. Analogue tape never did, and any form of disc recording a very
poor
second.
Old Stan Curtis has an interesting take on analogue recorders;!
And a few other audio topics.
http://www.stancurtis.com/PDFs/HiFi%20Critic%205.pdf
--
Now there was a chap who knew his onions.
--
Woody
harrogate3 at ntlworld dot com
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October 18th 17, 01:48 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Crosley's top end record player
In article ,
Woody wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message
news
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
scribeth thus
In article ,
Woody wrote:
Clearly you have never had the joy of listening to a direct cut
disc
played on a good turntable with a moving coil cartridge into any
sort
of reasonable system. It is a really something to behold.
I've had the joy of listening to the live sound in the control room
where
it's being balanced/recorded. Only a good digital recording comes
close to
that. Analogue tape never did, and any form of disc recording a very
poor
second.
Old Stan Curtis has an interesting take on analogue recorders;!
And a few other audio topics.
http://www.stancurtis.com/PDFs/HiFi%20Critic%205.pdf
--
Now there was a chap who knew his onions.
If he does, he doesn't cover it fully in that article. More to lining up
an analogue tape machine for replay than simply cleaning the heads and
setting a level.
--
*Cleaned by Stevie Wonder, checked by David Blunkett*
Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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