Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I seem to remember a time when stereo records were incompatible with
mono cartriges, which lacked the vertical compliance necessary to avopid damage to the grooves. Sometime in the late 60's or early 70's, howvere, I remember "compatible stereo" records being introduced. About this time, the appearance of the records also seemed to chamge. Before this, stereo discs looked quite different. I remember having Peter Paul & Mary records in both mono and stereo, and the stereo ones looked quite different. The grooves appeared 'deeper'. |
#2
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
... I seem to remember a time when stereo records were incompatible with mono cartriges, which lacked the vertical compliance necessary to avopid damage to the grooves. Sometime in the late 60's or early 70's, howvere, I remember "compatible stereo" records being introduced. About this time, the appearance of the records also seemed to chamge. Before this, stereo discs looked quite different. I remember having Peter Paul & Mary records in both mono and stereo, and the stereo ones looked quite different. The grooves appeared 'deeper'. I'd like to know more about this. I remember a "compatible" record acquired in 1965, at which time I was very young but very interested in all things electronic. I wondered at the time if it was really different or if they were just telling the user not to worry, it will sound OK on your mono phonograph, and never mind that subsequent stereo playback will be impaired. As for the appearance of the records, of course the number of grooves per inch is something the maker can adjust freely; a record with 30 minutes of music per side will have them closer together than a record with 15 minutes of pop songs. You are no doubt already familiar with this. I wonder if it had something to do with the change you noticed. On almost all the LP records I've ever owned, the grooves look more or less uniform all over the record. A strking exception is the "Basic Library of the World's Greatest Music" circa 1961. These are classical records, in mono, and the grooves look very different as you go along from one musical passage to another. So you get a pattern of irregular concentric stripes. What does this tell us about how they were made, I wonder? |
#3
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"M. Covington" wrote in message
... wrote in message ... I seem to remember a time when stereo records were incompatible with mono cartriges, which lacked the vertical compliance necessary to avopid damage to the grooves. Sometime in the late 60's or early 70's, howvere, I remember "compatible stereo" records being introduced. About this time, the appearance of the records also seemed to chamge. Before this, stereo discs looked quite different. I remember having Peter Paul & Mary records in both mono and stereo, and the stereo ones looked quite different. The grooves appeared 'deeper'. I'd like to know more about this. I remember a "compatible" record acquired in 1965, at which time I was very young but very interested in all things electronic. I wondered at the time if it was really different or if they were just telling the user not to worry, it will sound OK on your mono phonograph, and never mind that subsequent stereo playback will be impaired. As for the appearance of the records, of course the number of grooves per inch is something the maker can adjust freely; a record with 30 minutes of music per side will have them closer together than a record with 15 minutes of pop songs. You are no doubt already familiar with this. I wonder if it had something to do with the change you noticed. On almost all the LP records I've ever owned, the grooves look more or less uniform all over the record. A strking exception is the "Basic Library of the World's Greatest Music" circa 1961. These are classical records, in mono, and the grooves look very different as you go along from one musical passage to another. So you get a pattern of irregular concentric stripes. What does this tell us about how they were made, I wonder? In the mono days, most of the groove adjustment was done manually by the mastering engineer, based on the loudness/dynamic range of the music being played. Stereo made this much more complicated, but only a few years after stereo records started being produced the first crude "feed-forward" lathes were introduced, creating a semi-automatic way of adjusting groove spacing dynamically. Then later, of course, more sophisticated servo-adjustments. I suspect the difference he is refering to (and you in the lst passage above) was the difference between early manually cut records and later, servo-adjusted ones. Perhaps even two different pressings of the same recording done a few years apart. |
#4
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
M. Covington wrote:
I'd like to know more about this. I remember a "compatible" record acquired in 1965, at which time I was very young but very interested in all things electronic. I wondered at the time if it was really different or if they were just telling the user not to worry, it will sound OK on your mono phonograph, and never mind that subsequent stereo playback will be impaired. I'm pretty sure "compatible" stereo discs had mono bass. One of the reasons mono cartridges destroyed stereo records was that they weren't designed to respond to vertical modulation and would tend to destroy grooves with much L-R (vertical) bass. Peter. -- |
#5
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter Irwin wrote:
M. Covington wrote: I'd like to know more about this. I remember a "compatible" record acquired in 1965, at which time I was very young but very interested in all things electronic. I wondered at the time if it was really different or if they were just telling the user not to worry, it will sound OK on your mono phonograph, and never mind that subsequent stereo playback will be impaired. I'm pretty sure "compatible" stereo discs had mono bass. That was one possibility that crossed my mind. Bass tones, being the largest in magnitude, would cause the most vertical displacement of the stylus. Would mixing the bass to mono cause the records to look different? I think it might. I know that stereo records definitely looked different in the mid-60s. They looked much 'duller' and darker than monos of the same music. If this is what happened, did this practice become standard? Is the bass on stereo records today still mixed to mono? If so, does this make the records easier to press? One of the reasons mono cartridges destroyed stereo records was that they weren't designed to respond to vertical modulation and would tend to destroy grooves with much L-R (vertical) bass. Correct. I did find this: http://www.stevehoffman.tv/forums/sh...ad.php?t=38101 Peter. -- |
#7
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter Irwin wrote:
wrote: It is possible to build a system which would limit L-R bass only when necessary, but since the effect of stereo bass is fairly subtle if it can be heard at all, making the bass mono seems the easiest solution. So, the 'compatible' method is now the standard? All stereo LPs are mixed to blend the bass to center? If so, does this make the records easier to press? I doubt it makes any difference. Peter. -- |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
RIP Bob Feldman - Red House Records | Pro Audio | |||
Kerry Refuses To Release Personal Records | Audio Opinions | |||
the water mark left on the records after cleaning | High End Audio | |||
Are good LP playing systems more sensitive to worn records | Audio Opinions |