E
ecc83
Well-known member
The problem of wearing out your records can be solved by ripping them to hard drive/CD/DVD. Heresy?
I don't think so. Whatever the qualities that make vinyl attractive will be perfectly preserved by ripping the music to 16bit* digital 44.1kHz because that system SO far exceeds the noise and distortion of tape/record and playback.
Those that disagree must please do a proper job of ripping (not just stuff it thru WMP!) and then A/B the result taking care to calibrate levels to better than 0.1dB.
Then, whilst I see a quality descent everywhere, MP3, DAB, etc, there is no case IMHO for better than 16 bits at 44.1kHz (NB I am NOT arguing about the original recording, just the final release format) There are very few studio monitoring systems that can take full advantage of the dynamic range of 16bits, leave alone many domestic systems. (find me a power amp with S/N of -140dB below full output?).
The pressing quality of vinyl was already falling in the 80's. Hi Fi News, The Gramophone and other publication waged a constant war with the record houses and that was when the industry was dripping with money. Can't see the quality improving for a niche market?
Yes, records can be stunning. I remember hearing some direct cut jazz over a very high end system but that is not going to happen, much, is it? It is paradoxical that vinyl/tape was overtaken just as digital systems could have vastly improved it. Reasonably priced digitally controlled parallel trackers. Super tight tape control virtually eliminating wow and flutter. Digital management of tape and cutting levels to avoid distortion. None of these thing directly intrude on the actual analogue signal but could make it even better.
*Rip at 24bits and leave 20dB of headroom to cover spits and pops. These can cause limiting in the converter signal chain and intrude. And actually sub 1gram playback systems do not cause appreciable wear, it is just that is nigh on impossible to keep the damn things clean!
Dave (Kevlar hat on!)
I don't think so. Whatever the qualities that make vinyl attractive will be perfectly preserved by ripping the music to 16bit* digital 44.1kHz because that system SO far exceeds the noise and distortion of tape/record and playback.
Those that disagree must please do a proper job of ripping (not just stuff it thru WMP!) and then A/B the result taking care to calibrate levels to better than 0.1dB.
Then, whilst I see a quality descent everywhere, MP3, DAB, etc, there is no case IMHO for better than 16 bits at 44.1kHz (NB I am NOT arguing about the original recording, just the final release format) There are very few studio monitoring systems that can take full advantage of the dynamic range of 16bits, leave alone many domestic systems. (find me a power amp with S/N of -140dB below full output?).
The pressing quality of vinyl was already falling in the 80's. Hi Fi News, The Gramophone and other publication waged a constant war with the record houses and that was when the industry was dripping with money. Can't see the quality improving for a niche market?
Yes, records can be stunning. I remember hearing some direct cut jazz over a very high end system but that is not going to happen, much, is it? It is paradoxical that vinyl/tape was overtaken just as digital systems could have vastly improved it. Reasonably priced digitally controlled parallel trackers. Super tight tape control virtually eliminating wow and flutter. Digital management of tape and cutting levels to avoid distortion. None of these thing directly intrude on the actual analogue signal but could make it even better.
*Rip at 24bits and leave 20dB of headroom to cover spits and pops. These can cause limiting in the converter signal chain and intrude. And actually sub 1gram playback systems do not cause appreciable wear, it is just that is nigh on impossible to keep the damn things clean!
Dave (Kevlar hat on!)