Moderne wrote: I would imagine a certain amount of EQ adjustment/compression (I'm going a bit off-piste here!) would also have been needed to squeeze 20 tracks onto one LP; I'm sure Jim Nugent can offer a better explanation.
JimN wrote:Moderne wrote: I would imagine a certain amount of EQ adjustment/compression (I'm going a bit off-piste here!) would also have been needed to squeeze 20 tracks onto one LP; I'm sure Jim Nugent can offer a better explanation.
How about this one...
The 33.33 rpm 12" disc was designed for long-playing, but not for limitless playing. Squeezing the pitch of the groove in order to cram more onto the vinyl requires the dynamic range to be audibly reduced. The "Twenty Golden Greats" (vinyl LP version is really compressed to death in order to fit all the material onto one disc.
"Microgroove" discs (LPs and EPs) were always observed to be quieter than 45rpm singles. 78 rpm records were louder still (the design was originally sufficient to drive an acoustic horn).
See this helpful little web-page, which confirms that 18 minutes per side is optimal. 30 minutes per side is past the properly acceptable limits of quality.
http://www.themasterdiskrecord.com/2014/06/deciding-long-make-side-vinyl-record/
JimN wrote:The 33.33 rpm 12" disc was designed for long-playing, but not for limitless playing. Squeezing the pitch of the groove in order to cram more onto the vinyl requires the dynamic range to be audibly reduced. The "Twenty Golden Greats" (vinyl LP version is really compressed to death in order to fit all the material onto one disc.
JimN wrote:Moderne wrote: I would imagine a certain amount of EQ adjustment/compression (I'm going a bit off-piste here!) would also have been needed to squeeze 20 tracks onto one LP; I'm sure Jim Nugent can offer a better explanation.
How about this one...
The 33.33 rpm 12" disc was designed for long-playing, but not for limitless playing. Squeezing the pitch of the groove in order to cram more onto the vinyl requires the dynamic range to be audibly reduced. The "Twenty Golden Greats" (vinyl LP version is really compressed to death in order to fit all the material onto one disc.
"Microgroove" discs (LPs and EPs) were always observed to be quieter than 45rpm singles. 78 rpm records were louder still (the design was originally sufficient to drive an acoustic horn).
See this helpful little web-page, which confirms that 18 minutes per side is optimal. 30 minutes per side is past the properly acceptable limits of quality.
http://www.themasterdiskrecord.com/2014/06/deciding-long-make-side-vinyl-record/
iefje wrote:My grandparents used to have a record player with four speeds: 33 1/3, 45, 78 and also 16 rpm. Does anyone have ever come across a record which had to be played at 16 rpm?
cockroach wrote:I think 16 2/3 rpm was used for spoken word recordings mainly, such as instructional recordings for learning foreign languages..
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