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Wordle 461 3/6
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Wordle 461 3/6
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"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Wordle 461 4/6*
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Happiness will never come to those who fail to appreciate what they already have. -Anon
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Wordle 461 3/6
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Wordle 461 4/6
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Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well-preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming βWow! What a Ride!" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Wordle 461 5/6*
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Wordle 461 5/6
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"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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This will change your vinyl listening...so it's almost as good as CD Quality.
Only $999 USD
Ortofon 2M Black LVB 250[^]
What is it, you ask?
A high quality needle for your turntable. π€¦ββοΈπ€¦ββοΈπ€¦ββοΈ
Who is buying that? Go ahead and spring for the CDs.
Edit
I just read a couple of the features:
** Features a Nude Shibata diamond on a Boron cantilever
** Multi Wall Carbon Nano Tubes (MWCNT) rubber suspension provides superior damping
Superior!!
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As a teenager and college kid I had vinyl and a decent B&O turntable. Then CDs came out and it was a game changer. Music was clearer and fuller plus the media (while certainly not indestructible) was more robust. Now most folks (myself included) are streaming music. CD quality (or better) and no media.
I don't understand this fad of going back to vinyl. I call BS on folks who claim the sound is better than digital. They're fooling themselves...
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Are you trying to tell me that the scientific engineering of the Nude Shibata diamond on a Boron cantilever may just all be bunk?
I can't imagine.
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Well... I am a HUGE fan of carbon nano tubes...
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But you need a pair of matched tuned platinum-plated cables or it's all for naught.
And don't forget the power conditioner.
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My ears are shot from Navy Service and playing in a Rock and Roll band, for 46 years or so.
The whole "quality of the sound" issue just passes me by.
I now listen to books on CD, mostly "Disc World" novels, when I am driving.
My problem is that the car manufacturers are no longer putting CD players in cars. My current car has a CD player, and I intend to hold on to it until it dies.
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And here I am listening to MP3 files I ripped from vinyl with an ordinary stylus on the turntable I bought in the 80s (Technics)...
Unsure when I last bought a new stylus for it, but it must have been the 90s, it cost $50 USD at the time as I recall.
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But your missing out on MWCNT (Multi Wall Carbon Nano Tubes)
You obviously don't have a very discerning ear.
Now send me your $999!!!
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raddevus wrote: You obviously don't have a very discerning ear.
Absolutely correct.
It looks like I can get a whole new Technics turntable for that money. Hmmm... maybe no stylus included...
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raddevus wrote: But your missing out on MWCNT (Multi Wall Carbon Nano Tubes) You cannot even begin to enjoy the MWCNT without a pair of Sennheiser Orpheus headphones[^]. And these are a mere second place on the list of most expensive headsets. If you want to go to the top be ready to fork a dash over 130000$
Mircea
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I always wanted a real turntable when I was a kid/teenager; I had a cheap one that played well enough.
I was looking at the Rega Planar 3 turntables.
It was something only my friend rich parent could afford.
I sold all (except a few) my records when CDs came out.
I never really looked back, but heck the Rega planar looks fine.
(obviously, I thought I could be a DJ and looked at the technics 1200 turntables a few time)
CI/CD = Continuous Impediment/Continuous Despair
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Does it fix all the scratches on the vinyl media?
- I would love to change the world, but they wonβt give me the source code.
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When I was a boy (read: long, long ago), our neighbor shipped a small pile of old records to a US company who read the tracks photographically, in stray light, so the groove was in deep shadow, with the groove top making a sharp edge with the illuminated top surface. The pickup rests somewhat down in the groove, wearing the sides, but doesn't touch that sharp edge.
Reading the sharp, unworn edge, and transferring its waves to a magnetic tape was close to directly reading the master tape. Our neighbor told that the tape he received made him aware of instruments he never knew was in the orchestra when listening to the record ...
This was in the 1970s, so it must have been done with analog technology. I recently made some back-of-envelope estimates of what it would take to do this with a digital camera and digital logic. I was shocked by the technical requirements. It certainly can be done, but probably not in your hobby workshop in your basement, if you get my drift ...
If you make such a setup, handling scratches and dust is a trivial matter. Wear doesn't matter at all. Frequency is no problem - waves are really flat. The big issue is to read the amplitude with high precision, for obtaining a good S/N ratio. I really wish that I had the resources to set up a system that could do this with, say, an 8k pixel image sensor across the track width, 13 bits of resolution, or 12 bits for each edge in a stereo track. (HiFi freaks frown at 12 bits resolution, but anything beyond that requires very expensive sensors.)
I suspect that my neighbor's records may have been 78s, i.e. widely spaced mono tracks of below-HiFi frequency range. But then: This was fifty years ago. Today we should be able to handle both 'microgroove' records and stereo sound.
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HiFi fans are crazy. Vinyl/analog fans are the loonies among the crazy.
I'll give those analog guys one digit (i.e. thumb), though: High quality digital sound requires that there is no clipping! Digital clipping is terrible. Clipping does occur in analog circuits as well, but in a much more gradual way - especially with tubes, as opposed to transistors. The audible effect is not quite as bad as in the digital world. Maybe it is, if you drive a tube amp into the same amount of clipping, percentage wise, but with a given sharp peak in the input signal, the measured clipping will be lower - the amp will be able to partially follow the signal, rather than cut it off abruptly.
An old story:
When I was a high school exchange student in the US in the 1970s, I lived with a family where the father had been a soldier in the Korean war, as a radio man. His patrol was locked in by an enclave of enemy troops, in a location where their radio was not able to make contact with the headquarter to request support. But they managed to modify the voltage regulator to provide twice the rated anode voltage to the final transmitter stages, raising the output signal so much that they managed to get through to the headquarter, and enforcements were sent to rescue them.
My host family father was a radio engineer for the rest of his life, but he never really became friends with transistors. His life was saved by tubes, because they can (for a short time) be run far beyond their ratings. He always maintained that if their equipment back then had been transistorized, any similar attempt to push the transmitter beyond limits would have burnt the power transistors off immediately, and they wound not have survived.
There are close parallels between tube/transistor and analog/digital. My idea is that if you really want the benefit of analog 'soft clipping', doing analog on transistors is a hybrid, a bastard. Proper analog sound requires the 'soft' headroom provided by tubes.
I do not own any tube amp. I will never get myself one. But I feel sort of regard for those analog fans who insist on tube technology throughout. It makes me think than maybe they listen with their ears, not by the specs.
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I agree with you on clipping. I've experienced that in relation to musical instruments & I believe in another place...
We have a maytag clothes washer & it has this belt problem that makes it scream! From the first time we used it it would SCREAM!!!
I decided (ignorantly) to attempt to record it using an Android phone an iPhone anything like that.
Well, the built-in microphones definitely clip the sound so that hit only sounds like a slight sound but in real life it is EAR-SHATTERING!! Seriously.
Also, I think sound is often suited better to analog world too actually. I get it.
It's just that this stylus/needle being $999 seems a bit out there.
I also really like the warm sound of tube amps (as a electric guitarist).
Great story by the way. Thanks for sharing.
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This is the first time that someone has clearly explained to me why vinyl/analog can sound better than CD/digital.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Just getting back into vinyl, its just a better experience. Also got an Akai reel to reel and the sound quality is awesome.
When I was in Nam I
Had an airforce guy going on r&r bring me back an akai m8. One day I was recording and we got a rocket attack and I dove for the bunker. When it was over I came back up and noticed it had been recording so I refund and played it back.
Well it was a recording of the attack and it sounded so real everyone dove back into bunkers. Ehen they heard me laughing they all came back up and proceeded to cuss me. From then on I when we got attacked they we old ask me if I left the fsmnrd machine running
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - A updated version available!
JaxCoder.com
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