|  | Posted by Bill Vermillion on 10/22/05 21:05 
In article <nce6f.13538$H3.8087@twister.nyc.rr.com>,AnthonyR <nomail@nospam.com> wrote:
 >
 >"Bill Vermillion" <bv@wjv.com> wrote in message news:Ion1KJ.1ou7@wjv.com...
 
 [lots deleted - wjv]
 
 
 [regarding the laser LP player]
 
 >>>You might be right, I was just guessing the price from memory,
 >>>Yikes...that's a lot for a record player.
 
 
 >> It is targeted to a specific market - places that have archival
 >> storage and are fragile enough that they can not be played on
 >> physical contact equipment without the risk of damage.
 
 >> Those include a lot of old transcriptions where the lacquer can
 >> start peeling off.
 
 >> And other delicate things like the stack of 16" glass based
 >> transcriptions I have.  Those were used for live recordings on
 >> portable recorders, and the reason for the glass was that during
 >> WWII all aluminum was being used for making such things as
 >> airplanes.
 
 >> In many respects the glass base was better as it was much flatter -
 >> but it is breakable.
 
 >> Well I have a turntable that does tempo changes flawlessly.
 
 >> I've used it to take old recordings that I felt were cut too fast
 >> or too slow and brought them into what I thought felt good.  I've
 >> played them for others and they agree with my judgement.
 
 
 >> But then I did spend a lot of years as music director in radio
 >> and then wound up as a recording engineer running a fairly costly
 >> [for it's day] recording studio.  The day we got it up and running
 >> we had $850,000 invested - and that would take $3-5 Million today.
 >> Analog studios were NOT cheap - nor were huge sound-proof rooms.
 
 >> But the turntable is a Stanton  ST-150.  It has a built in
 >> preamp with SPDIF outputs and is locked into the turntable speed
 >> control and pitch.  You press the lock pitch button and move the
 >> slider and tempo changes.  It was designed for DJ [club] work
 >> but with the S-shaped tone arm it does quite well on the humoungous
 >> stacks of '45s that I accumlated as MD over the years.
 
 .....
 
 >Hey Bill,
 
 >Thanks for the informative post.
 
 >I transferred most of my old vinyl using the cheaper Stanton
 >STR8-20 and going into PC with a preamp and then cleaning and
 >removing pops with the pinnacle "clean" program. It was pretty
 >buggy however and since bought the magix audio studio cleaner,
 >but haven't had time to learn it well, and keep using the clean
 >as i am use to its simplicity. What's amazing about digital
 >restoration is also how you can capture a sound sample from the
 >beginning of the record and create a noise pattern to remove from
 >the rest of the recording, sorry I forgot the proper terminology
 >at the moment.
 
 >The pops can also be removed individually when pretty bad, but I
 >use sound forge for that. :)
 
 The wet-playing can remove a lot of noise - and when I show it to
 people they don't believe.
 
 I used to have an old LencoClean - which is a wet-playing device
 that tracks a moist pad across the groove when it plays.
 
 But they aren't available in the US anymore.  I've found links
 that show they are still available in Europe - but the places
 that I found to buy them won't ship outside of Europe because
 of insurance problems [as noted on their site].
 
 So for the 45's and less-than-audiophile-quality LPs I mix up a
 small solution of pure water with a couple of drops of a wetting
 agent.  And then 'paint' it on the surface with a small brush.
 
 The Stanton 680HP cartridge that comes with the ST-150 [I prefer
 the curved arm instead of the ST8-150 - with the straigh tone arm
 better for club deejay work] has not problem as the stylus is
 exposed enough not to wick up the solutions.  The lower priced
 500's would be good too.
 
 [On my good LPs I use a VPI 16.5 vacuum cleaning device].
 
 The list price of the ST-150 probably scares many off, but I found
 a place that sold it for $419 - shipping included.  Their sites
 says they will ship within 48 hours.  I checked and my order was
 picked up by UPS about 4 hours after I placed it, and got to me
 2 days early.  So good price and fast service is hard to find.
 
 If you [or anyone else] wants the name of the place you can send me
 email - as I don't like to post commercial things on Usenet -
 having that inbred into my motions here since I got on the 'net
 in about 1984. [My address has been 'real' since I got on the 'net
 and with proper filters spams is not a problme. [Unix systems and
 my own mail server]
 
 With the SPDIF output, and running into my Creative Soundblasster
 Audigy 2ZS, the pops/click are removed in real-time.  I've only had
 to bring up an editor 1 or 2 times to do some severe cleanup.  But
 those recording were used on the radio station I used to work at a
 jillion years ago [ it seems ] and were badly worn, and some
 exhibited severe cue-burn, which can't be eliminated.
 
 Another plus on the SPDIF is that the ground loops or induced hum I
 was getting with analog inputs disappeared entirely.
 
 Bill
 --
 Bill Vermillion - bv @ wjv . com
  Navigation: [Reply to this message] |