Who you crappin'?
1st press vinyl vs new vinyl something is terribly wrong here
Sam here again and I’ve been telling you what you know is true new vinyl is fake vinyl and it’s not an accident that classic stereoness you hear with vintage vinyl is missing from new vinyl. and it ain’t no accident friends. 1st press https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=34q59j0VaPU new remaster sound like vinyl cd? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=87xebVFhhF0
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Myth: Vinyl has greater resolution than CD because its dynamic range is higher than for CD at the most audible frequencies... The dynamic range of vinyl, when evaluated as the ratio of a peak sinusoidal amplitude to the peak noise density at that sine wave frequency, is somewhere around 80 dB. Under theoretically ideal conditions, this could perhaps improve to 120 dB. The dynamic range of CDs, when evaluated on a frequency-dependent basis and performed with proper dithering and oversampling, is somewhere around 150 dB. Under no legitimate circumstances will the dynamic range of vinyl ever exceed the dynamic range of CD, under any frequency, given the wide performance gap and the physical limitations of vinyl playback. More discussion at Hydrogenaudio. |
Sam here and what I’m talking about is a very generic sound signature with 1st press vinyl not the mixing or sound quality or the performance but a distinctive stereoness. To my ears 1st press vinyl has stereo + stereo depth perception and new vinyl has stereo + mono depth perception. If I take a digital rip of 1st press vinyl and run it through isotope rx5 phase filter the phasing is 99% of the time different from (L) + (R) channels and when I check new vinyl the phasing is always the same for both channels. If I do independent phase correction for (L) + (R) channels on new vinyl it now sounds like 1st press vinyl. |
Sam, Within your previous thread of “is it possible to make digital audio sound like vintage vinyl”, you stated that stereo depth perception was a term that you just “made up”. How can you expect anyone to provide a cogent response when you use terms that you yourself have coined? Oh, sorry, I seem to have forgotten that is not at all your goal. How’s that “possibly 100-year old piece of wood” stuck in the lamp socket doing nowdays? Is it transmitting its woodness into your electrical system better than the small piece of paper did, hence making digital sound even more like vintage vinyl? Please, don’t leave us hanging. All (or, perhaps none) of Audiogon awaits closure. Or have you moved on to something that is even more worthy of initiating a, dare I say it, paradigm shift? Keep on trollin’ |
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