Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#28
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Audio Empire" wrote in message
... On Wed, 2 Nov 2011 19:49:26 -0700, bob wrote I think most knowledgeable audio/music enthusiasts would have to agree that decent vinyl performance is far better than was Philips cassette performance - even WITH Dolby B and HX Pro). I was surely of that opinion back when such things mattered. I always found commercially available cassettes to sound lousy. Even on a Nakamichi 1000, they had much more wow and flutter than an LP, they were noisier than an LP and always sounded compressed. In short, they were lousy. Agreed. Of course, so were LPs. Of course only people who had heard well made high speed tapes (e.g. 7 1/2 ips and higher) knew about it. snip All of them. Project. Music Hall, and Rega all make fine performing "high-end" turntables. There's no market for any other kind. I wouldn't call them "fine performing." But certain know-nothing reviewers have anointed them "high-end," and that's been enough. They have low wow/flutter, They have up to six magnitudes more FM distortion than even mediocre digital, and the FM distortion is often at similar frequencies. the arms are low mass/low friction and dynamically balanced, and they do a decent job of playing a record. They are not appreciably better than the better products that we had in the late 70s and early 80s. There has been no new signficant technical innovations since then. Of course they don't elicit the last word in resolution from one's vinyl but they are better than any $89 direct-drive table from the 1980s. If you set the bar low enough. Also the above is an assertion with no reliable technical support. Measurements? Reliable listening tests? snip But there are scores of new ones that have taken their place. The absolute bottom tier is gone, that's true. There are no more cheap mass-market tables from the likes of Pioneer, Yamaha, Panasonic etc., Not those brands in particular, but the low end is still well- represented. Last time I was in Best Buy (a while ago), the only thing they carried was a sub-$100 Sony. It's still made, and has plenty of competition. Yes, it seems that cheap tables from Numark, Ion, and Sony are still available, but I must say that I've never seen one in a store. It's all about what stores you visit. They are all that I see in stores, including Best Buy. They are all over the web. They are sold in ads in Sunday suppliments. Numark tables show up from time-to-time in Music stores as "DJ equipment" however. There is plenty of evidence that at its peak, DJ LP sales dwarfed the audiophile market. Let's not forget that the only thing that kept vinyl alive in the 90s AT ALL was the DJ market. (And they were not using the hamster-powered belt drives of today's entry-level audiophile market.) The SL1200 is out of production, but several copycats are still out there. That was then, this is now. I never had a DD table that satisfied me, That's all about your prejudices. Got any technical evidence that there is a categoric and/or inherent technical problem with DD turntables? |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|