Vinyl
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@Aqua-Letifer said in Vinyl:
…Holy shit you might even talk to someone. Total time spent with others not in your family has been going down in recent years, inversely to depression, loneliness, and isolation. So at the risk of defending common sense, yeah, getting your ass off the couch and into a record store is better for you than choosing a Spotify playlist.
Great overall post, especially this part. I’m not sure if it has always been this way..: but it seems lately out in public it is increasingly awkward to talk with random people. Such as at the airport. Eye contact? GMAFB
@Aqua-Letifer said in Vinyl:
…Holy shit you might even talk to someone. Total time spent with others not in your family has been going down in recent years, inversely to depression, loneliness, and isolation. So at the risk of defending common sense, yeah, getting your ass off the couch and into a record store is better for you than choosing a Spotify playlist.
Great overall post, especially this part. I’m not sure if it has always been this way..: but it seems lately out in public it is increasingly awkward to talk with random people. Such as at the airport. Eye contact? GMAFB
It's been that way forever in prison.
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Even with the very rare, tick or pop, listening to my original pressing of Miles Davis, Kind of Blue from 1959, brings a certain pleasure you just cannot get from even a recent and more pristine copy. I have three vinyl versions including a 90s remix that I gave to my daughter, and the Mobile Fidelity Labs 45rpm Original Master Recording. I also have it on CD of course.
Knowing that the record on the turntable is 64 years old and sounds that good, is something else.
Some of the Deutsche Grammophon pressings of classical music I have sound so good, and they are from the 1960s and 70s. They are absolute bargains on the used market. Brand new still shrink wrapped box sets of 9+ albums only cost $10-$20. If they are not brand new they usually have very little if any play time on them.
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I have a vinyl LP enroute from Great Britain as I type this.
Selling my current turntables to upgrade to a new one that's made in Delavan, WI, about 20 minutes from here.
In listen to at least 1 album every day. I just sit there and listen. No phone or anything. Just listen.
Selling my current turntables to upgrade to a new one that's made in Delavan, WI, about 20 minutes from here.
Here's another one you could get.
The entire turntable has been machined from a single block of aluminium and includes only two output jacks on the side of the enclosure; power comes from a USB Type-C 5 V connector and the internal phono pre-amp is connected to a 3.5mm output (which can be used as a headphone jack or 3.5mm to RCA output).
If you’re still looking for the tonearm and cartridge — give it up.
There is no tonearm to adjust, no complex settings—just place the vinyl upside down, press Play, and the 0.4 x 0.7 mil elliptical diamond stylus does the rest. Waiting for Ideas does not specify if the PP-1 utilizes a MM or MC cartridge, but it’s mounted upside down to read the grooves.
The other rather interesting feature is the self-learning closed-loop speed control, that figures out if you are playing a 33.3 or 45 rpm record.
Only USD$6000
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Anybody who really valued their vinyl collection would surely invest in a laser-turntable, which reads the disk without contacting it.
And for $11,0000, you get CD quality transfer of data, at only 30 times the price of a decent CD player!
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This is fascinating. Hit the arrow to start the animation.
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@taiwan_girl said in Vinyl:
Ringtones had their brief moment in the sun, lol.
that's right. 555. Kind of forgot that I dont hear those very much at all anymore.
I have a ringtone of the pocket watch chimes from the spaghetti western For a Few Dollars More. Have used it going on 18 years. Very few people recognise what it is or the story behind it.
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Link to video
Very cool. May just have to do that also!