Dear Parrot, I have never had the pleasure of listening to an ELP, but from my reading, the laser "reads" not only the signal encoded in an LP but also the dirt in the grooves. The laser cannot differentiate between the two. Therefore, unless the LP is very clean, the resulting signal is contaminated with.... noise. If you own an ELP, perhaps you are in a position to say otherwise.
Is it possible to have a quiet vinyl records
Hi, I am new to vinyl. I own VPI prime and ortofon quintet black cartridge. For the record cleaning I use record doctor V, brushes and proper sleeves. As much as I am impressed with the sound quality, I am also very disappointed that many records sound bad with very laud background noise. I read some reviews which point out that some turn tables with some cartridges are super quiet, but does it only happen with the best pressed records and most others will still make lots of pops and background noise. It there a a good method to truly enjoy quiet vinyl music or its something I have to get used to. Thank you.
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I would strongly recommend you look at getting an ultrasonic cleaner. I have used vacuum cleaners in the past and they are useful, but nothing compared to ultrasonic in my mind. Here is one post on the subject, but you can find much more information here and by searching the 'net. https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/thumbs-up-for-ultrasonic-record-cleaning |
So if my phono preamp (Ifi Iphone 2) is not stable enough, why some records play very clean. Should all play with noise in that case.Some surfaces are actually better than others. So you may well encounter LPs that are silent even on an unstable phono section. As a general rule of thumb, if you have to load a low output moving coil cartridge to get to sound right, the stability of the phono section is suspect. |
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