chakster.
I said... "I don't claim to be able to hear this difference"
You seem to be agreeing with me?.
I said... "I don't claim to be able to hear this difference"
You seem to be agreeing with me?.
Stylus-Drag..Fact or Fiction?
"Dear friends: I would like to know if each single LP was recorded/cutted at exactly/accurated 33.333..rpm and if for any reasons exist tiny deviations from 33.333..rpm accuracy why or how can we or not detected through an accurate TT that spins at exactly 33.333...rpm during play time of LPs?" The most popular motor for the cutting lathes is a Technics SP02 direct drive motor which is quartz locked for speed accuracy and weighs ~110lbs with plenty of torque. W&F are rated at 0.0084% RMS. In terms of absolute speed accuracy, it should be more accurate (and more stable) than most of the DD tables playing the LP it cuts. http://pspatialaudio.com/lathes.htm |
of course, this is a natural selection problem. far beyond numbers or instruments. my son-in-law is a physicist working for the Allen Institute. they do brain research. he assembles big data for the neuroscientists. he said in maybe 10 years they will be able to replicate a cubic cm of mouse brain tissue. but right now it’s too much data to replicate. he does not think he will live long enough for them to be able to do that for a cm of human brain tissue. just too much data. so when we think that we can measure what our senses have evolved to sense, we are kidding ourselves. and not just the hearing part. the whole body is involved in whether we think something is fake or real. which is why getting as close to absolutely steady as possible means more to our musical sensibilities than what we view as corrected speed. there are no naturally occurring servos. In general, accurate rotation is obtained by servo-control by negative feedback, but at the micro level, if it rotates or becomes faster, it detects it and slows it, and repeats the operation to make it faster if it gets slower. If you try to measure a period with a small level, you cannot measure the instantaneous state, so you should measure the average value. Therefore, fine vibration generated by servo-control cannot be measured by the measuring instrument, it depends on the human ear. |
Hi @lewm.
Here's a few links that may be of interest; cannot say if they count as satisfactory. Comparison of Slotless and Slotted Motors. The article does discuss cogging.https://www.celeramotion.com/applimotion/support/technical-papers/slotless-vs-slotted-motors/ Brushless, slotless, and cogless (1999) https://www.designnews.com/content/brushless-slotless-and-cogless/60538412940113 |