so a good turntable setup doesnt really mean higher fidelity than a cd, but just means that youre listening to artifacts put into the music caused by a vinyl record that make it sound better to the ears?
i was being serious. i didnt know that
Quote from: MCS_FaderJok0 on April 17, 2014, 07:18:44 PMso a good turntable setup doesnt really mean higher fidelity than a cd, but just means that youre listening to artifacts put into the music caused by a vinyl record that make it sound better to the ears? That's what I get out of reading about the physical limitations of the medium.Again, to use the amplifier analogy: If it were possible to build a 100% distortion-free amplifier, then there would be zero difference between listening to playback through a transistor amp or a tube amp. (Obviously here we'd have to exclude the cases where one deliberately desires to drive the amplifier to distortion levels, such as with a guitar amp.)In other words, all amplification technologies introduce distortion, even in cases where it's not desired. In terms of what we hear, we only care about the differences between these various technologies because they each color the sound in different ways.
There's a difference though. When you're using a distorted valve guitar amp, you're specifically doing it because the distortion has it's own unique attractive tone that you can't accurately achieve with a solid state amp. And that tone IS the music itself. When artists used to release their records on vinyl or tape, they didn't do it specifically because vinyl or tape created an overall tone that colored the WHOLE RECORDING a certain way. They did it because that was the medium available at the time. The "artifacts" and noise produced by the medium were completely unintentional, which is why when digital and CD's became big, they all remastered and rereleased everything to remove that garbage and clean it up.
My dad is a (now retired) analog hardware engineer, physics major, hi-fi enthusiast. Built his own tube amps, preamps, speaker cabinets.
Amps always produce some distortion even when it's not wanted.
Is he an EL34 man, or a 6L6 man?
Always? What do you mean by that?
Quote from: |iR|Focalor on April 18, 2014, 12:39:46 PMIs he an EL34 man, or a 6L6 man?Haha. I'd guess 6L6 for full-range amplification purposes.
Hey, the Three Dogs had something to offer.........Judas Priest....