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Which is best - vinyl or CD ?

Printed From: Progarchives.com
Category: Other music related lounges
Forum Name: Tech Talk
Forum Description: Discuss musical instruments, equipment, hi-fi, speakers, vinyl, gadgets,etc.
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=20251
Printed Date: November 21 2024 at 22:49
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Topic: Which is best - vinyl or CD ?
Posted By: mystic fred
Subject: Which is best - vinyl or CD ?
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 13:35

A common enough question in music forums -  but some may find my experiences useful i hope!

The case for vinyl.  Until recently i bought all my new and second hand music on vinyl. On good quality equipment you find recordings vary greatly due to the mastering techniques used in the studio, but in the late 60's and early 70's real hi-fi was for the rich and up till the 1980's most people played their music on dansettes and those awful music centres, and everything sounded the same. Many recordings were mastered for these things, especially singles. i have found many early lp pressings to be the most reliable in terms of quality. i have some original  Buddy Holly lp's that sound absolutely stunning, thick vinyl / audiophile / virgin vinyl  pressings don't all sound vastly different from their counterparts, i have found some thin floppy bargain bin discs that have been brilliant. The biggest drawbacks with vinyl concerns user-friendliness: noise during quiet passages, also they collect dust, are easily scratched and you can't skip from track to track with a remote or play them in the car, yet the thrill of owning an original shiny black disc and the artwork/ inserts to gaze at is uncomparable to cd packaging.

The case for cd. When cd's first came generally available in the mid - 80's Mark Knopfler said "now everyone can hear what our music sounds like to us in the studio" and the German conductor Von Karajan was equally enthusiastic and claimed digital and cd was the future of recorded music. in those days the technology was still in its infancy and had many shortcomings, longevity was one issue, mastering was another. Decent Hi-fi equipment was much more affordable by this time and everyone was dumping their music centres and marvelling how great the new cd's sounded on their brand new systems, a fantasic improvement over their old outdated ones! in recent years digital technology has come along in leaps and bounds but i have found overall digital is or can be better than vinyl (CD,SACD,DVD-A) but is not a general rule as some vinyl originals have sounded much better than cd/remastered cd's  in my own comparison tests (Layla, Rush's Hold Your Fire/Grace albums, Yes Big Generator all sound a lot better to me on vinyl, although the early Robert Plant and the Led Zeppelin remastered albums, also Rick Wakeman's Six Wives masterpiece, seem to have have been improved on cd). Saying that, the case is the same with vinyl it depends what you play it on - a good quality player (around £500+)  should be standard for the best sound quality.

Overall vinyl is not finished yet and even seems to have enjoyed a resurgence in recent years, so although i will buy all my new music on cd I won't be dumping any of my vinyl collection yet!



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Replies:
Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 13:47
There is no real difference in the perceived quality. I prefer CD for numerous reasons, but I'm sure that if I had a vinyl player today, I would buy many new (and old) releases on vinyl just for nostalgic reasons.

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Posted By: Lindsay Lohan
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 14:49
A cheap turn table plays better than a cheap cd player i can almost guarantee you that.

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Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 14:57
^ let's not go there - at least not in this thread. agreed?

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Posted By: Lindsay Lohan
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 14:58

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ let's not go there - at least not in this thread. agreed?

Well do you disagree that a cheap vinyl player for the price for forexample at $250 sounds better than a cd player for $250?



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Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 15:14
Cd me for me. My vinyl days are over thank goodnesss!

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Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 15:16
Originally posted by Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ let's not go there - at least not in this thread. agreed?

Well do you disagree that a cheap vinyl player for the price for forexample at $250 sounds better than a cd player for $250?

I dont agree.....................is that cheap anyway? its more mid price isnt it? Is that US dollars? Hm maybe it is cheap!



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Posted By: Lindsay Lohan
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 15:16
Do you prefer CD because it is more practical? Why not go the full step to mp3 then? Thats even more practical?

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Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 15:19
Originally posted by Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ let's not go there - at least not in this thread. agreed?

Well do you disagree that a cheap vinyl player for the price for forexample at $250 sounds better than a cd player for $250?

Yes I do. But discussing that here in this thread is rather off topic. It's not good CD player vs. cheap CD player.



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Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 15:19

Originally posted by Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan wrote:

Do you prefer CD because it is more practical? Why not go the full step to mp3 then? Thats even more practical?

It sounds better...thats why.



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Posted By: Lindsay Lohan
Date Posted: March 14 2006 at 15:21
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

Originally posted by Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan wrote:

Do you prefer CD because it is more practical? Why not go the full step to mp3 then? Thats even more practical?

It sounds better...thats why.

It sounds better than vinyl??? Ah well i give up



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Posted By: Dick Heath
Date Posted: March 21 2006 at 13:10

But vinyl is still a crap polymer for analog discs - although better than shellac of the old 78's, admittedly - but with plastic techology having evolved phenomenally 50 or more years since vinyl was first introduced, its about time a far better quality plastic or elastomer be used - they are certainly available - which

  • doesn't pick up static
  • doesn't  scratch so easily, indeed positively scratch resistant
  • doesn't warp
  • gives a far higher level of reproduction from the master, gives longer life to the sub-masters
  • comes in any colour you like

CD are made from polycarbonate metallised with pure aluminium, which is typical protected from oxidation by an acrylic-urethane lacquer, and as such 25 years on still is pretty cutting edge combination of materials.



Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 21 2006 at 13:26

Some vynils are 70 years old and still in perfect condition...

So, that's not an issue at all.

For sure, there are huge diference between a 180g and a flexible lower quality vynil.
But, anyway vynil -or rather analog in general- will always sounds better very simply cause analog doesn't alter the signal's integrity as digital does.

Now, you can have some pleasure in digital...but you have to pay a lot!!! more than analog!


Posted By: cobb
Date Posted: March 21 2006 at 21:28
MP3's - gets rid of those annoying highs on digital CD


Posted By: Drew
Date Posted: March 21 2006 at 22:27
CD! get with the times

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Posted By: GoldenSpiral
Date Posted: March 21 2006 at 22:46
After much debate and debacle, I decided that it's all a totally subjective matter.  certain things sound better on vinyl because its the way they were originally made, or because that medium suits them better.  Other things tend to sound better in the digital realm because that is the way they were conceived.  I really don't think theres a scientific answer to this one.        

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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 22 2006 at 06:20
Those who say that simply don't know.
A good Rega Planar 3 explodes most CD players.

It's like that, and theres nothing to do to change it.
Digital doesn't works, that's sad. However, with much investment and optimization, you can reach an acceptable
level of satisfaction on CD.
But if you put a good vynil on a good turntable beside, you cry.


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 22 2006 at 06:28

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

Those who say that simply don't know.
A good Rega Planar 3 explodes most CD players.

It's like that, and theres nothing to do to change it.
Digital doesn't works, that's sad. However, with much investment and optiization, you can reach an acceptable
level of satisfaction on CD.
But if you put a good vynil on a good turntable beside, you cry.

What can you do if most of the music you like is not even published on vinyl? Does that mean that you'll never be able to really enjoy the music (only "acceptable" is certainly not good enough)?



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 22 2006 at 06:41
That's it. And that's why i invested much into CD playback system...To have pleasure on digital and enjoy the great choice available on CD. Also, i must admit that CD is more convenient.

You can even have a lot of pleasure, but you have to have a solid bank account:





Posted By: The-Bullet
Date Posted: March 22 2006 at 22:02
Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:


Some vynils are 70 years old and still in perfect condition...

So, that's not an issue at all.

For sure, there are huge diference between a 180g and a flexible lower quality vynil.
But, anyway vynil -or rather analog in general- will always sounds better very simply cause analog doesn't alter the signal's integrity as digital does.

Now, you can have some pleasure in digital...but you have to pay a lot!!! more than analog!

But don't analogue sources deteriorate with every listen even using the highest quality hi-fi equipment and top quality vynil/tape ?.

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Posted By: stan the man
Date Posted: March 22 2006 at 23:36
I find listening to vinyls funner and more intiment.  It seems to have a warmer sound.  But overall CD has better quality sound imo.

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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 23 2006 at 03:14
No, vynil is better!!


Posted By: Eetu Pellonpaa
Date Posted: March 23 2006 at 03:26
I think CD is like having a normal cup of coffee, and vinyl is then like an espresso with belgian chocolates with a glass of armagnac!  


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 23 2006 at 04:11

Originally posted by Eetu Pellonpää Eetu Pellonpää wrote:

I think CD is like having a normal cup of coffee, and vinyl is then like an espresso with belgian chocolates with a glass of armagnac!  

How about listening to CD while having an espresso with belgian chocolates with a glass of armagnac?



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 23 2006 at 05:08
Ok, so a big CD


Posted By: Eetu Pellonpaa
Date Posted: March 23 2006 at 08:15
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by Eetu Pellonpää Eetu Pellonpää wrote:

I think CD is like having a normal cup of coffee, and vinyl is then like an espresso with belgian chocolates with a glass of armagnac!  

How about listening to CD while having an espresso with belgian chocolates with a glass of armagnac?

No! A gramophone!  Well, a CD would go in emergency situation.



Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 23 2006 at 08:25


...Or a more polite way to say...digital sucks!


Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 23 2006 at 08:44
Originally posted by The-Bullet The-Bullet wrote:

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:


Some vynils are 70 years old and still in perfect condition...

So, that's not an issue at all.

For sure, there are huge difference between a 180g and a flexible lower quality vynil.
But, anyway vynil -or rather analog in general- will always sounds better very simply cause analog doesn't alter the signal's integrity as digital does.

Now, you can have some pleasure in digital...but you have to pay a lot!!! more than analog!

But don't analogue sources deteriorate with every listen even using the highest quality hi-fi equipment and top quality vynil/tape ?.


TAPE:

-Pre recorded 60's/70's average quality tapes are indeed a little fragile and MAY deteriorate after many passages.
On another hand, much improvment has been done on blank tape cassettes through the late 80's and early 90's.
These high quality blank tapes are now hard to find (such as TDK SA-X for chrome tapes) but it's still possible thanks to Internet. These tapes are far more resistant on all levels.
BTW, tape is a reliable format, proof is that its used for DAT format.

VYNIL:

-When the sylus is clean and the vynil also (there are solutions to clean both), the degradation is very little.
It's like people who say that tubes amps slightly decrease in quality through the time, and so they prefer solid states.
Ridiculous! even a used tube does better than a solid state! Same for vynil versus digital.



Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 23 2006 at 09:47

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

Ridiculous! even a used tube does better than a solid state! Same for vynil versus digital.

 I remember my old tube guitar amp with worn tubes ... it sounded disgraceful! Low frequency sounds actually made the small metal particles inside the tubes vibrate and create awful noises!

Face it: A tube is similar to a light bulb. I may last much longer, but at some time it will break and need to be replaced.



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 23 2006 at 10:18
Yeah, indeed, when it's really worn, it's dead!
So, it's clear when it happens.


Posted By: Chicapah
Date Posted: March 23 2006 at 11:05
I've been collecting LPs since the 60s and I still love to spin 'em.  They still sound great to me.  CD's allow me to take my music on the road, so to speak, so I have many LPs duplicated in my cd collection.  The big difference is the fact that LPs gave me the cover art and liner notes experience that is obviously shrunken   and diminished on disc packages.  There's nothing like sitting back and taking in a new Yes album with Roger Dean's art covering your lap and that's a joy that the younger generations may never experience. 

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Posted By: Fusioned
Date Posted: March 25 2006 at 16:54
Neither! I do digital tracks mostly because they're cheap and have amazing
sound quality. I recently bought Yes - Relayer off iTunes and compared to
the Vinyl version. Digital blew it away. CD is better than Vinyl but digital
trumps all!

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Posted By: goose
Date Posted: March 25 2006 at 20:56
Digital trumps CD? That doesn't even begin to make sense..


Posted By: Zepology101
Date Posted: March 25 2006 at 22:24

I like them both. they both have their advantages.

 



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Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: March 25 2006 at 22:48
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

But vinyl is still a crap polymer for analog discs - although better than shellac of the old 78's, admittedly - but with plastic techology having evolved phenomenally 50 or more years since vinyl was first introduced, its about time a far better quality plastic or elastomer be used - they are certainly available - which

  • doesn't pick up static
  • doesn't  scratch so easily, indeed positively scratch resistant
  • doesn't warp
  • gives a far higher level of reproduction from the master, gives longer life to the sub-masters
  • comes in any colour you like

CD are made from polycarbonate metallised with pure aluminium, which is typical protected from oxidation by an acrylic-urethane lacquer, and as such 25 years on still is pretty cutting edge combination of materials.

Wow, that's pretty interesting.

 

 

 

Seriously though, I'm in the slow process of ripping most of my several hundred vinyl albums to mp3 and putting the ones I want to take out of the house on CD.  I can't really tell the difference as far as quality since my turntable is the trusty $109 US Sony PS-LX250H with a cheap $30 stylus, but when I see the amount of the analog spikes that get cut off when converted to digital, I do sometimes wonder if I'm missing anything.

The biggest advantage to having music on a digital media is that I can rip my CDs to my hard drive and if the original ever gets damaged, I can recreate it from mp3 files.  You can't do that with vinyl, and since most of my vinyl albums are more than 20 years old (and quite a few of them are long out of print), they would be expensive (or impossible) to replace. 

I'm pretty sure the fine humanitarians who run the music industry don't have any kind of convenient replacement policy for damaged albums.



Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 26 2006 at 00:46
The only vinyl I have left in my collection are the audiophile pressings from the 70's and 80's, Mobile Fidelity, Nautilus, Direct Disc etc. To me these blow CDs away. I got about 150 of these pressings. I just went on a binge of buying these. They used nothing but high density virgin vinyl and pressed them from the studio master tapes. Standard vinyls at the time were just crap.

I don't play them much anymore since I transfered them to TDK metal cass. and reel-to-reel tape with dbx noise reduction. They sound just as good on tape anyway. In fact I still have some duplicates still sealed like Floyd's DSOTM and Beatles Abbey Road I've been offered as much as $200 a piece for.

But about 80% of my listening is CDs for simply practical reasons. CDs can sound great if mastered right, but I've heard some bad sounding CDs too.


Posted By: Laurent
Date Posted: March 26 2006 at 01:14
The very first time I listened to Close To The Edge on vinyl, it practically jumped straight out at me how inferior it sounded to the Rhino Remaster. The best way to describe it is it sounded muffled and soft(especially the drums) whereas the CD version sounds crisp and clear.

Just a personal anecdote, interpret it how you will, maybe I just have a bad pressing.

Other albums, however, I notice no substantial differences between LP and CP(DSOTM, for example)..


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Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 26 2006 at 03:07

Originally posted by goose goose wrote:

Digital trumps CD? That doesn't even begin to make sense..

It's odd ... sometimes, when I'm listening to some stuff that I ripped from CD in 192kbps WMA, it sounds really amazing and leaves nothing to be desired ... then again sometimes the compression artifacts jump right at me and destroy my listening experience. I don't know why that happens ... it's not just differences in the quality of the files, it also has a lot to do with your current situation (stress) and a whole bunch of other factors not related to music.

BTW: While it's actually impossible for a compressed version of some source to sound better than the source, there are some explanations:

  • The compressed version was ripped from a better source (e.g. the remastered CD)
  • The compressed version is in 24bit/96khz (my new Creative X-Fi can create that from 16bit/44.1khz).


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Posted By: Flyingsod
Date Posted: March 26 2006 at 18:27
Be very glad if you can't hear the difference between cd and vinyl. I can't and I love it. No reason for me to spend 1000 bucks just for a cd player, god that would suck. For me it breaks down like this...Cd's are better because they never develop pops and cliks. Vinyl is better just becuase its cooler artwork wise. To me cd's have zero artisitic draw. They just are not big enough to matter. its like having a poster of the mona lisa compared to having just a postcard. no one proudly hangs a postcard over the mantle :)

 For what its worth I still have and play all my vinyl. I buy and play cd's. One  important thing though, you can't clean your stash on a jewel case


Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 26 2006 at 19:24
Originally posted by Laurent Laurent wrote:

The very first time I listened to Close To The Edge on vinyl, it
practically jumped straight out at me how inferior it sounded to the
Rhino Remaster. The best way to describe it is it sounded muffled and
soft(especially the drums) whereas the CD version sounds crisp and
clear.

Just a personal anecdote, interpret it how you will, maybe I just have a bad pressing.

Other albums, however, I notice no substantial differences between LP and CP(DSOTM, for example)..


It may have to do with when you bought this vinyl pressing. It could've been a later pressing in which a 2nd or 3rd generation master tape was used. Also later vinyl quality was getting pretty bad from the late 70's on to keep the $5 price tag. One of my audiophile lps is CTE pressed from the original studio master and it sounds either equal or better than the new CD remaster.

I remember the best vinyl quality for standard issues even back in the later 70's came from the big labels like Warner, RCA and Columbia. They kept their quality pretty good for the most part. But Atlantic really dropped the ball along with smaller labels like Mercury, Arista etc.

I remember buying Rush's Moving Pictures and damned if that thing already had clicks and pops fresh out of the jacket as well as Signals and some of Alan Parson's albums. That's when I went binging on the audiophile pressings. They were about $12 a piece then but well worth it.


Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 01:09

The only reason why I miss tyhe Vinyll is because the beautiful art covers.

But CD lasts more, as another person said, the vinyl suffers degradation with  each reproduction and looses quality, it's a fact that a needle scratching plastic material causes damage each and every time you play the album, no matter how much you take care of an old LP it will sound terrible after several listens.

You can't play a vynil in your car and cassettes suck.

The laser beam of a cd player is not solid so it causes absolutely no degradation of the CD, you can listen it 1,000 times and will sound exactly the same if you have a minimum care.

Can be reproduced for your personal use (if you own the original album according to law) with absolutely no loss of quality.

So I have to stay with the CD.

Iván



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 04:29
False that vynil is torn after a few passages.
With a GOOD cartridge on a good turntable, playing a good record, it doesn't get torn...

And no, cassette doesn't sucks...


Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 10:27
Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:



And no, cassette doesn't sucks...


Cassettes were really great when they had the old dbx noise reduction systems incorporated in cass. decks. It would virtually eliminate all hiss without muffling the sound like Dolby would do. Unfortunately it was incompatible. You had to RECORD in dbx in order to PLAYBACK in dbx. If you don't encode it, it sounds like crap. That's why it was dicontinued.


Posted By: Chicapah
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 10:45

Originally posted by Flyingsod Flyingsod wrote:

Be very glad if you can't hear the difference between cd and vinyl. I can't and I love it. No reason for me to spend 1000 bucks just for a cd player, god that would suck. For me it breaks down like this...Cd's are better because they never develop pops and cliks. Vinyl is better just becuase its cooler artwork wise. To me cd's have zero artisitic draw. They just are not big enough to matter. its like having a poster of the mona lisa compared to having just a postcard. no one proudly hangs a postcard over the mantle :)

 For what its worth I still have and play all my vinyl. I buy and play cd's. One  important thing though, you can't clean your stash on a jewel case

Well, I wasn't going to bring that last part up but that was a real advantage of double albums! 

Of course cds and downloads are better than vinyl, that's the nature of technology to improve the sound quality and durability.  You get no argument from me.  Just comparing the LP version of "Selling England" to my new remastered cd is like night and day.  I just miss the emphasis on and importance of album art in the new age.  That's why I treasure my old LPs.



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 10:49
Indeed, big DBX systems were working well to remove noise without lowering highs.
But like for Dolby, there's "Dolby" and "Dolby".

I.E my Nakamichi 1000 features two kinds of Dolby:
"Dolby NR" ("Noise reduction") and "Dolby NL" ("Noise limiter"). The Dobly NR is crap as it lower much highs.
The NL one works far better as it removes virtually all the noise, but very few highs.

I simply don't use Dolby for recording.

But indeed, the best to use are big external DBX boxes (there are used in studio). It's far superior to Dolby system. But very expensive.


Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 11:53
When my Teac cass. deck with dbx I bought in '83 bit the dust, I didn't know what to do for years since dbx became obsolete on standard decks. But then a repair tech referred me to a guy who would buy up old dbx encoder/decoder units and sell them. So I traded him my old dbx 4bx dynamic range expander, which is now pretty much useless these days, for a unit and bought a new cass. deck and now it works like a charm. So I lucked out.


Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 11:59
As you point out, these DBX boxes expand the dynamic which can be nice also!

What's your new tapedeck?


Posted By: Politician
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 12:02
I think the question is unanswerable: it depends entirely upon the
mastering. I have some CD reissues that beat the vinyl originals hands
down for sound quality, and I have some vinyl originals that sound vastly
better than the CD reissues. It's practically impossible to compare like for
like.


Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 12:07
Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

As you point out, these DBX boxes expand the dynamic which can be nice also!

What's your new tapedeck?

Denon DRM555P, nothing too fancy. All I do is play the tapes I burned off my audiophile vinyls 20 years ago, so I didn't get dual deck.


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 12:15
^ and with CDs you don't have any noise ... at least unless you listen to your music at unreal volume.

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Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 12:18

Oliverstoned wrote:

Quote

False that vynil is torn after a few passages.

Torn is a hard word, but I have almost 2,000 vinyls, and even when I can't be more careful with them, after a few passages there are noises, this is inevitable. Some are scratched (What was easier than with CD's), but that's because lack of care in a specific case or an accident.


With a GOOD cartridge on a good turntable, playing a good record, it doesn't get torn...

Physic laws are clear any two solid things in constant contact will sufer degradation. As long as a needle touches the surface of a vinyl, both will suffer, despite the quality. I have a Dual with all those weights at the end of the arm to be graduateds, and always suffers.

And no, cassette doesn't sucks...

Analogic reproduction of an LP to a Cassette causes a certain loss of quality, that's also a fact, that's why each time you duplicate a cassette from another cassette, the quality loss is more evident.

Cassettes are affected by heat, fungus (Well Lma is a city with 95% of humidity average), and also suffer degradation because the tape touches the playing and/or recording head, so in a shorter time than a LP will loose quality.

There was another problem, it was  harder to select songs, and when you did it, the constant FFD or Rewind, will cause that the tape leght change and of course a distortion of the sound.

When you copy a CD to a CDR there's absolutely no loss of quality.

Believe me, I was raised with LP's, I love them, I keep and play carefully each and everyone, but with my CD's I have lets say 1% of the problems than with LP's.

Iván



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 14:10
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ and with CDs you don't have any noise ... at least unless you listen to your music at unreal volume.


False. High ends players on transparent systems reveals noise on MOST OF the cds, even some DDD ones!!

Surprising, isn't it?

The paradox is that we audiophiles are happy when we hear noise on CDs: cause it shows how transparent and revealant the digital set up is.


Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 14:16
Originally posted by ivan_2068 ivan_2068 wrote:

Oliverstoned wrote:

Quote


False that vynil is torn after a few passages.


Torn is a hard word, but I have almost 2,000 vinyls, and even when I can't be more careful with them, after a few passages there are noises, this is inevitable. Some are scratched (What was easier than with CD's), but that's because lack of care in a specific case or an accident.


With a GOOD cartridge on a good turntable, playing a good record, it doesn't get torn...


Physic laws are clear any two solid things in constant contact will sufer degradation. As long as a needle touches the surface of a vinyl, both will suffer, despite the quality. I have a Dual with all those weights at the end of the arm to be graduateds, and always suffers.And no, cassette doesn't sucks...


Analogic reproduction of an LP to a Cassette causes a certain loss of quality, that's also a fact, that's why each time you duplicate a cassette from another cassette, the quality loss is more evident.


Cassettes are affected by heat, fungus (Well Lma is a city with 95% of humidity average), and also suffer degradation because the tape touches the playing and/or recording head, so in a shorter time than a LP will loose quality.


There was another problem, it was harder to select songs, and when you did it, the constant FFD or Rewind, will cause that the tape leght change and of course a distortion of the sound.


When you copy a CD to a CDR there's absolutely no loss of quality.


Believe me, I was raised with LP's, I love them, I keep and play carefully each and everyone, but with my CD's I have lets say 1% of the problems than with LP's.


Iván<!-- Signature -->



Indeed, there's a slight degradation, but it's often due to the dirt phenomenon which "bakes" the dirt on the stylus and so "plots" the groove (that's how many second hands vynils are ruined, even if they look new).
I also admit that contrary to digital -when it's well done, not on a computer-, analog copy involves degradation.

But, when you practice both on good hifi equipment (not necessary high end, but good and musical devices), you quick understand the absolute superiority of analog over digital, like tube versus solid state in the highs, and the torn problem become soon a pure theorical issue.

Eventually, it's a matter of choice. For sure, digital is more convenient.


Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 14:19
Originally posted by marktheshark marktheshark wrote:

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

As you point out, these DBX boxes expand the dynamic which can be nice also!

What's your new tapedeck?

Denon DRM555P, nothing too fancy. All I do is play the tapes I burned off my audiophile vinyls 20 years ago, so I didn't get dual deck.


A very cheap and musical "current" tape deck is the Yamaha KX 530. It's very musical with beautiful aerial and open mids/highs. Unfortunatly, it's quite thin in the low.




Among recent decks, you have the Teac V8030s (the biggest they made in 1998) which is good(but not extremely musical).



Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 27 2006 at 14:55

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ and with CDs you don't have any noise ... at least unless you listen to your music at unreal volume.


False. High ends players on transparent systems reveals noise on MOST OF the cds, even some DDD ones!!

Surprising, isn't it?

The paradox is that we audiophiles are happy when we hear noise on CDs: cause it shows how transparent and revealant the digital set up is.

 Of course there is noise on CDs. But the noise you hear on most recordings was already there on the master tape.the signal to noise ratio on a CD is 96 dB (unless I'm much mistaken), which is much more than on any vinyl or cassette. That means that with a perfectly mastered CD with the volume turned up so loud that the loudest parts of the recording would reach 96 dB, the noise would still not be audible.



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Posted By: mystic fred
Date Posted: March 28 2006 at 10:01

Originally posted by Politician Politician wrote:

I think the question is unanswerable: it depends entirely upon the
mastering. I have some CD reissues that beat the vinyl originals hands
down for sound quality, and I have some vinyl originals that sound vastly
better than the CD reissues. It's practically impossible to compare like for
like.

you have it there in a nutshell, my son!Big smile



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 28 2006 at 12:12
Mmm...but a good analog always beats a good numeric...

Nothing to do!


Posted By: goose
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 07:58
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by goose goose wrote:

Digital trumps CD? That doesn't even begin to make sense..


It's odd ... sometimes, when I'm listening to some stuff that I ripped from CD in 192kbps WMA, it sounds really amazing and leaves nothing to be desired ... then again sometimes the compression artifacts jump right at me and destroy my listening experience. I don't know why that happens ... it's not just differences in the quality of the files, it also has a lot to do with your current situation (stress) and a whole bunch of other factors not related to music.


BTW: While it's actually impossible for a compressed version of some source to sound better than the source, there are some explanations:



  • The compressed version was ripped from a better source (e.g. the remastered CD)

  • The compressed version is in 24bit/96khz (my new Creative X-Fi can create that from 16bit/44.1khz).

For a start CD is a digital format, as I'm sure I don't need to explain . Also while surely there are digital formats that are higher fidelity than CD, tracks compressed from the CD source and uploaded to itunes certainly aren't one of them. I'm almost positive that there aren't any companies selling downloads above 16 bits or 44k unless perhaps they're lossless.


Posted By: goose
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 08:03
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ and with CDs you don't have any noise ... at least unless you listen to your music at unreal volume.
False. High ends players on transparent systems reveals noise on MOST OF the cds, even some DDD ones!! Surprising, isn't it? The paradox is that we audiophiles are happy when we hear noise on CDs: cause it shows how transparent and revealant the digital set up is.


 Of course there is noise on CDs. But the noise you hear on most recordings was already there on the master tape.the signal to noise ratio on a CD is 96 dB (unless I'm much mistaken), which is much more than on any vinyl or cassette. That means that with a perfectly mastered CD with the volume turned up so loud that the loudest parts of the recording would reach 96 dB, the noise would still not be audible.

True enough, but that only holds for peak level. Also is that the noise level with dithering or without? I can't remember the figures offhand


Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 08:07
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by goose goose wrote:

Digital trumps CD? That doesn't even begin to make sense..


It's odd ... sometimes, when I'm listening to some stuff that I ripped from CD in 192kbps WMA, it sounds really amazing and leaves nothing to be desired ... then again sometimes the compression artifacts jump right at me and destroy my listening experience. I don't know why that happens ... it's not just differences in the quality of the files, it also has a lot to do with your current situation (stress) and a whole bunch of other factors not related to music.



It destroys your musical experience?
That's not odd, that's digital!

BTW: While it's actually impossible for a compressed version of some source to sound better than the source, there are some explanations:



  • The compressed version was ripped from a better source (e.g. the remastered CD)

  • The compressed version is in 24bit/96khz (my new Creative X-Fi can create that from 16bit/44.1khz).


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 08:12

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

It destroys your musical experience?
That's not odd, that's digital!

You should become a politician, oliver! You're great at misinterpreting and wrong quoting.

BTW: Nice picture in your sig!



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 08:23
Thanks for the comment about my sig.
Nice collage indeed.

You said that digital artifacts -make worse by over compression- sometimes destroyed your musical exp, that's it?


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 08:29

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

Thanks for the comment about my sig.
Nice collage indeed.

You said that digital artifacts -make worse by over compression- sometimes destroyed your musical exp, that's it?

Yes ... but only sometimes. It depends on many factors:

  • How much compression (128, 192, 256, etc.)
  • The system you play it on
  • The mood you're in
  • The environment (noises)
  • ...

If I had to answer the question "does lossy compression (wma, mp3, ogg, etc) destroy your listening experience?" without any "buts" or "ifs", my answer would be:

No.

 



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Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 11:04
I'm a little new on the mp3s. So what's better for sound? The higher bit rates like 256 and 320, or the lower like 128 and 192? And does the bit rate matter when converting mp3s to standard CD? In other words, does a 320 kps mp3 sound the same as 128 kps mp3 when converted to a CD?


Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 11:53
The higher the compression, the worst the sound.


Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 12:39
So a higher kps means more compression?


Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 12:53
It seems. Mike will confirm.


Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 13:04
I downloaded an album that had 2 tracks at 320 kps and the rest at 192. To me the 320 tracks sounded better, more fuller than the others.


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 13:55
Originally posted by marktheshark marktheshark wrote:

So a higher kps means more compression?


No ... the less kbps, the higher the compression. Real CD audio (uncompressed) has approx. 1,500 kbps, and standard mp3 has only 128kbps. This means that it has been compressed to less than 10% of the original size. So of course much of the original data is lost. If you use 256kbps instead of 128kbps much less of the data is lost, and the quality of the audio is much closer to the original.

BTW: Lossless formats manage to shrink most signals to 60% of the original size ... that would be approx. 800 kbps.


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Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 14:37
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


Originally posted by marktheshark marktheshark wrote:

So a higher kps means more compression?
No ... the less kbps, the higher the compression. Real CD audio (uncompressed) has approx. 1,500 kbps, and standard mp3 has only 128kbps. This means that it has been compressed to less than 10% of the original size. So of course much of the original data is lost. If you use 256kbps instead of 128kbps much less of the data is lost, and the quality of the audio is much closer to the original.BTW: Lossless formats manage to shrink most signals to 60% of the original size ... that would be approx. 800 kbps.

Ok, I think I got a jist of what you're saying except for your last statement. What do you mean by lossless formats?

When you convert mp3s to real audio CD, do you retain the lost information back to 1500 kps? Or is the information lost completely?


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 17:01
^ when a track is converted to mp3, the information is lost ... converting it back to CD of course can't magically restore the lost information. In essence, converting something to mp3 means simplifying it.

About the lossless formats: These compress the audio like a ZIP-File ... no information is lost, and all of the original data can be restored. Popular lossless formats are: Apple Lossless, WMA Lossless, FLAC. The only drawback of these formats is that most mobile players don't support them ... and of course that they aren't as effective as the lossy formats (meaning: the files are not as small).


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Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 17:05
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ when a track is converted to mp3, the information is lost ... converting it back to CD of course can't magically restore the lost information. In essence, converting something to mp3 means simplifying it.About the lossless formats: These compress the audio like a ZIP-File ... no information is lost, and all of the original data can be restored. Popular lossless formats are: Apple Lossless, WMA Lossless, FLAC. The only drawback of these formats is that most mobile players don't support them ... and of course that they aren't as effective as the lossy formats (meaning: the files are not as small).

Ok, I got you. So with WMA, you're getting more of the true sound of the original CD then with an mp3. Thanks.


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 17:16
^ with WMA Lossless. There is also a lossy WMA compression (WMA 64, 128 etc.).

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Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 17:34
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ with WMA Lossless. There is also a lossy WMA compression (WMA 64, 128 etc.).

How can you tell which one you have?


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 17:57
^ look at it (open it in a media player, it shows the format info/bitrate).

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Posted By: Tony Fisher
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 18:19
Vinyl - CDs are not even close.

BUT - to hear vinyl at its best you need to spend a great deal of money on a top class set up. This preserves the discs and lets you hear them as they were recorded. 180g pressings help as well.

I use a Pink Triangle Anniversary + SME V + Lyra Lydian.

Cost £4300. Value priceless!


Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 18:34
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ look at it (open it in a media player, it shows the format info/bitrate).

You think they could make it anymore confusing with all these formats?


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 29 2006 at 18:52
yes, I agree that it's getting too complicated.

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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 30 2006 at 01:27
Originally posted by Tony Fisher Tony Fisher wrote:

Vinyl - CDs are not even close.BUT - to hear vinyl at its best you need to spend a great deal of money on a top class set up. This preserves the discs and lets you hear them as they were recorded. 180g pressings help as well.I use a Pink Triangle Anniversary + SME V + Lyra Lydian.Cost £4300. Value priceless!


Happy to hear that.


Posted By: goose
Date Posted: March 30 2006 at 19:34
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Popular lossless formats are: Apple Lossless, WMA Lossless, FLAC. The only drawback of these formats is that most mobile players don't support them .
I don't know that that's entirely true any more... presumably iPods do support Apple Lossless? It's also possible, although fiddly to overwrite the firmware on a whole lot of devices and get FLAC support. Not that I'd recommend that to anyone, because it will more than likely void the warranty and if you're really that desperate for lossless audio on the move there are much easier options!


Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 30 2006 at 22:51
All in all as far as this thread is concerned, I have to agree with about 95% of what oliver and Tony has said. Analog, under the right conditions can just blow digital away in terms of just sheer warmth and fullness of sound.

As stated earlier, the only analog pressings I go with are the high-line audiophile pressing that were the "big thing" prior to digital in the late 70's and early 80's. I'll put my Beatles box set up against any of the CDs.

The advantages of digital is of course practicality and durability. But also that when a good digital re-master is done, the studio master tape is used as the template as opposed to most mass production analogs where a 2nd, 3rd or even a 4th generation copy of the studio master is used. Many factors involved here. I have audiophile pressings of Yes CTTE, Floyd's DSOTM, Moody's DOFP, Parson's Robot and their CD counterparts. The CDs come pretty close to the analog pressings, but still have that homogenized and cold digital sound. Just a little though. It has gotten better.

Then we come to SACD, which I think has potential. Great clear and warm sound like an analog LP, except there's a catch. You can't EQ it! You can't adjust the bass, mids, treble or anything! What you get is what you hear. I don't know if this an artist thing or what. When I bought my new unit with SACD capability, the first thing I bought was Floyd's DSOTM, and while it sounded very analog, I couldn't tweek it at all. To me the message from Waters and the gang was "This is the way WE mixed it, so you're stuck with it!" Give me a break!

Science certainly has the ability to make digital every bit (no pun intended) as good as analog. But what's keeping them from doing so? Answer is simple:

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$.

Isn't capitalism wonderful?! Yes, even a staunch capitalist like myself has a few gripes!

But only a few, so shut up!


Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 01:22
"Science certainly has the ability to make digital every bit (no pun intended) as good as analog"

I don't think so. Digital will always be inferior because of missing informations. And the human ear/brain detect it. The sad fact is that science created a technology (numeric) which doesn't works and that will never really do.
But yes, it enables to save old documents. But the price to pay is a big loss on quality.


Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 01:23
What's your CD player, Mark?


Posted By: marktheshark
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 02:44
Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

"Science certainly has the ability to make digital every bit (no pun intended) as good as analog"

I don't think so. Digital will always be inferior because of missing informations. And the human ear/brain detect it. The sad fact is that science created a technology (numeric) which doesn't works and that will never really do.
But yes, it enables to save old documents. But the price to pay is a big loss on quality.

You have a good point oliver, even at 50,000 kps the holes will never be filled. The best words I can come up with are from myself that I used to say to my friends who were getting into the CD bandwagon in '86 was that "Analog lp sound was welded, where as digital CD sound was riveted."

The unit I have now is the Sony DVP-NC875V 5 disc carousel unit that plays almost all formats. Cheap, but efficient.


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 03:49

Originally posted by marktheshark marktheshark wrote:

You have a good point oliver, even at 50,000 kps the holes will never be filled.

That is a conceit. The human ear is very well understood by science, and one of the estabilshed facts is that it doesn't have an unlimited resolution. It is true that the standard audio CD resolution is at the threshold ... there are situations (depending on the waveform of the signal) where the digital signal contains small mistakes which are audible. But these mistakes are really not audible as "harshness". Oliver (and others) will always deny that and say that they can easily hear the difference on their system. But on the other hand that hasn't been proven yet ... which I find strange. IF the difference would be so easy to hear, even sceptics like myself could not possibly deny it. So a company selling audiophile equipment could simply set up "listening centers" all over the world where people can go and hear the difference for themselves.

That hasn't been done yet. Why? Because the difference is not nearly has big or easy to hear. It is in fact so small that audiophiles are even afraid of listening tests (at least they keep avoiding them). 



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 04:09
"IF the difference would be so easy to hear, even sceptics like myself could not possibly deny it."

The problem is that a system needs to be fully optimized to really work. And you won't find it in shops, unfortunatly. But at my home, yes!
And all the ones who tried were convinced!


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 04:11

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

"IF the difference would be so easy to hear, even sceptics like myself could not possibly deny it."

The problem is that a system needs to be fully optimized to really work. And you won't find it in shops, unfortunatly. But at my home, yes!
And all the ones who tried were convinced!

But then WHY don't you find it in shops? I'm sure that there would be a market for a system like that. And what does that have to do with the vinyl/CD discussion ... I mean, were vinyls designed for 20,000 EUR systems? No.



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 04:31
It's simply choosen musical elements gathered and optimized with good link and power cables, vib cancelling devices, power filters and separated electric lines.
For example, you'll never find separated electric lines -cause it requires some work- in shops or hifi shows, whereas it's essential.

Moreover, very few demonstration systems features, meanwhile:
Good elements, tubes, good cables, power filters and vib cancelling advanced systems.

High end systems with big amps without separated electric lines is a waste of money.

For example, last time i've been to Paris hifi show, i've listen to JM LAB Utopia 100 000€/pair speaker and it was not good cause driven by non-musical solid state amps, and not optimized system.
The best system i heard there was the smallest (!) with the little italian "Diapason" bookshelf speakers with little CEC electronics (nice solid state integrated amp BTW) and overall: Good cables, good power cables and power filters!!


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 04:49
^ sorry oliver, but my university education (information technology / electronic engineering) prevents me from agreeing with many of the things that you call essential. There is no power line optimisation, it's just one of the audio "myths". You're free to believe in anything you want, but for me it is simply not possible.

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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 05:47
So, one more time, your pseudo scientific education makes you negate something as basic as power pollution?

For example, if you're listening to a tuner (radio), and then plug a CD player on the same line/plug, you 'll hear a styrong "shhh".

Why?
Cause CD players use cut-out power alimentation (alimentation à découpage) i'm not sure there's a good translation in english.
These kind of power alimentation reject a lot of electric pollution. That's why we use power filters and that's why it's strongly advised to separate digital from the rest of the system.

Even more basic: the respect of the good power phase sense. If you reverse the power phase, the device is out-of-phase, which results in a great harshness, a huge loss of dynamic, etc...


Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 05:57
Search something to reply..search!


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 06:08

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

So, one more time, your pseudo scientific education makes you negate something as basic as power pollution?

Hey, don't offend the professors who taught me!

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:



For example, if you're listening to a tuner (radio), and then plug a CD player on the same line/plug, you 'll hear a styrong "shhh".

Why?

I don't have the slightest idea what you're talking about. I'm not deaf, and trust me - if there was a strong "shhh", I would hear it. But there isn't.

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:


Cause CD players use cut-out power alimentation (alimentation à découpage) i'm not sure there's a good translation in english.
These kind of power alimentation reject a lot of electric pollution. That's why we use power filters and that's why it's strongly advised to separate digital from the rest of the system.

"Gobbledegook", that's what this is to me. Let's recap: You're not a technician, you said yourself that you don't understand the technical aspects of power conversion/amplification, yet you insist that what you are saying (and which you don't understand yourself) makes sense?

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:



Even more basic: the respect of the good power phase sense. If you reverse the power phase, the device is out-of-phase, which results in a great harshness, a huge loss of dynamic, etc...

Crap. The power supply converts the alternate current into direct current, which has no phase. Please don't talk about things which you know nothing about. Of course there are good power supplies and bad powersupplies, cheap ones and expensive ones.



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 06:15
http://www.tnt-audio.com/clinica/system-tweaking_e.html - http://www.tnt-audio.com/clinica/system-tweaking_e.html


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 06:45

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

http://www.tnt-audio.com/clinica/system-tweaking_e.html - http://www.tnt-audio.com/clinica/system-tweaking_e.html

That's an interesting article! My comments:

  • Polarity: I'm not buying it. As I said above, alternating current has no polarity ...
  • Phase: This is a non-issue as well. Only if some speakers (or - like the article said - some drivers in the speakers are somehow working with reversed phase, then there would be a problem. But unless something is very wrong in your amp, the original phase of the signal is always preserved, and there is no way for it to slightly degrade.
  • Physical Decoupling: Yes, I agree that this has a huge effect on the sound quality. But opinions are divided on how to get it right - I think there are several approaches that are ok.


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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 06:47
...of course, don't try to do the tests at home, cause it would not be revealant as you need a minimum of quality devices, and "that you are using reasonable quality interconnects".


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 06:51

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

...of course, don't try to do the tests at home, cause it would not be revealant as you need a minimum of quality devices, and "that you are using reasonable quality interconnects".

That's where the "voodoo" starts.



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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 07:14
Or snake's charming!










Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 07:34
^ ... it certainly looks impressive ... and we all know that the more impressive a piece of technology looks (or the more it costs), the more effective it is!

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Posted By: oliverstoned
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 07:42
It's impressive and overall efficient indeed!


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: March 31 2006 at 08:39

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

It's impressive and overall efficient indeed!

What's the point of all that shielding and protecting against electric pollution on the last few meters of the power cord anyway ... inside the wall it is not really shielded at all.



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