ruffrecords
Well-known member
There was also an EQ on some lathes tied to the lead screw so that HF boost could be applied as you got nearer the centre of the disc and the linear speed dropped.
Cheers
Ian
Cheers
Ian
diameter equalisation.ruffrecords said:There was also an EQ on some lathes tied to the lead screw so that HF boost could be applied as you got nearer the centre of the disc and the linear speed dropped.
JohnRoberts said:Remind me why all these modern hipsters are embracing vinyl again? :
JR
My dad was a recording engineer for RCA records so vinyl holds little mystery for me...volker said:I can see two reasons at play. First of all, it is much more satisfying to buy and own something physical rather than a file in some cloud on a remote server farm or to pay for streaming where you never really own anything. And second, vinyl is actually a novelty for many younger people, even if you find that hard to imagine. If I take myself, I am over 30 and I grew up without ever seeing a single LP. My dad was an early adopter for both cassettes and cds, so no vinyl around. I played the first LP at an age of around 20. So for all those "hipsters" younger than me the LP is actually something new and fresh, combined with nostalgia and some sort of extravagance, since you need a specific playback system. They don't buy it for technical reasons or because of the aural experience (that's the triode-class-A-crowd, less market share), they buy it simply because it is something non-mainstream.
ruffrecords said:There was also an EQ on some lathes tied to the lead screw so that HF boost could be applied as you got nearer the centre of the disc and the linear speed dropped.
JohnRoberts said:Remind me why all these modern hipsters are embracing vinyl again? :
Positively a myth, promoted by the bedroom studio guys over at GS.bluebird said:Another thing people don't know is before Pro Tools when you didn't have a Studer with a delay head, you had to use a digital delay to cut the program. And digital converters were not that good back then. So a lot of old records are actually poor digital copies of the original master tape.
I remember the idea floating in the air in the early 80's; apparently, the most convinced person about the viability of this method was the DeltaLab distributor (of course). I believe the concept never went further than experimentation (in France). And nobody would consider using anything else than an A80 for mastering.bluebird said:Another thing people don't know is before Pro Tools when you didn't have a Studer with a delay head, you had to use a digital delay to cut the program. And digital converters were not that good back then. So a lot of old records are actually poor digital copies of the original master tape.
In France wouldn't they use a Publison for delay? ;Dabbey road d enfer said:I remember the idea floating in the air in the early 80's; apparently, the most convinced person about the viability of this method was the DeltaLab distributor (of course). I believe the concept never went further than experimentation (in France). And nobody would consider using anything else than an A80 for mastering.
Only if they want to harmonize the track.JohnRoberts said:In France wouldn't they use a Publison for delay? ;D
JR
bluebird said:What volker said... People tell me they're kids collect them like baseball cards. Never open them or listen to them.
bluebird said:My mentor still cuts from tape and its a pretty involved process.
While this may already be used, when running through a digital path, even a few mSec of look ahead delay (feeding the side chain before the primary audio path) could anticipate peak limiting and support slower attack rates and/or less overshoot.bluebird said:I run a Neumann VMS66. It took me a second to figure out that things were getting darker towards the center of the disk. I now will automate the computer to add some high end as the side come to a close or just EQ the last song a bit. I also use plugins to combine the low end to mono. Cutting is a lot easier with the computer. My mentor still cuts from tape and its a pretty involved process. There are purists who demand an all analog path but don't understand how much better a cut I can get by dumping the tape to the computer first.
Another thing people don't know is before Pro Tools when you didn't have a Studer with a delay head, you had to use a digital delay to cut the program. And digital converters were not that good back then. So a lot of old records are actually poor digital copies of the original master tape. But vinyl is so noisy it doesn't matter anyhow
JohnRoberts said:While this may already be used, when running through a digital path, even a few mSec of look ahead delay (feeding the side chain before the primary audio path) could anticipate peak limiting and support slower attack rates and/or less overshoot.
Of course too much look ahead time could cause audible phantom modulations.
JR
pucho812 said:Are you talking about Ron M?
gridcurrent said:Positively a myth, promoted by the bedroom studio guys over at GS.
as of the mid 1980's, the major mastering rooms in Los Angeles continued to use preview machines,
machines made by: Studer, MCI, Scully, or Telefunken.
In olden days a repro head was fastened to the side of an Ampex 300.
Howard Holzer promoted the concept early on and even his devotees wouldn't use it.
The reason of the digital delay was cost and convenience as the budget rooms
could not afford multiple sets of eq, compressors, and Dolby.
If you KNOW of a mastering room that used delay, list it.
JohnRoberts said:While this may already be used, when running through a digital path, even a few mSec of look ahead delay (feeding the side chain before the primary audio path) could anticipate peak limiting and support slower attack rates and/or less overshoot.
Of course too much look ahead time could cause audible phantom modulations.
JR
Talking about different issues but yes, digital processing could deal with vinyl groove mechanics too.ruffrecords said:Don't you basically need to look one revolution ahead?
Cheers
Ian
Not really; the idea behind the use of the sync head for controlling pitch is simply look-ahead. It allowed the pitch control to anticipate the slow response of the mechanical assembly.ruffrecords said:Don't you basically need to look one revolution ahead?
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