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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Sam here and to answer vinylandtubes question let me make my position clear everything resonates at a frequency including wood and paper and the human body and frequency = tone and by extracting the frequency from an object i can apply that frequency to digital audio to change the tone. placing the object into the socket of a pluged in lamp is a great way for me to extract the frequencies from an object and encode them onto digital audio just like when i extract the frequencies from 1st press vintage vinyl and apply those frequencies to digital audio to make digital sound more like analog vinyl. if your questioning the technology it’s been around since the formation of the earth. I believe tesla said it best "if you want to find the secrets of the universe think in terms of energy frequency and vibration" I would like to here what geoffkait has to say on the subject he seems very smart and scientific and still keep an open mind. |
fuzztone 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. >>>>I don’t think anyone is questioning the “theoretical superiority“ of CDs regarding Dynamic Range or Signal to Noise ratio. The problem arises when the industry overly compresses CDs. I.e., Loudness Wars, which they’ve been doing for the last 20 years. So, it’s not a level playing field. Many CDs have less Dynamic Range than the early issue of the same recording on LP. Since LPs often suffer the same aggressive compression as CDs one should probably proceed on a case by case basis. One can use the Unofficial Dynamic Range Database as a guide. Also, as I’ve been cautioning, the CD playback system itself reduces the Dynamic Range of CDs even when the CD is not overly compressed. There are flaws in the way the CD transport reads the data that have been there since Gandhi was a Boy Scout. |
guitarsam OP Sam here and to answer vinylandtubes question let me make my position clear everything resonates at a frequency including wood and paper and the human body and frequency = tone and by extracting the frequency from an object i can apply that frequency to digital audio to change the tone. placing the object into the socket of a pluged in lamp is a great way for me to extract the frequencies from an object and encode them onto digital audio just like when i extract the frequencies from 1st press vintage vinyl and apply those frequencies to digital audio to make digital sound more like analog vinyl. if your questioning the technology it’s been around since the formation of the earth. I believe tesla said it best "if you want to find the secrets of the universe think in terms of energy frequency and vibration" I would like to here what geoffkait has to say on the subject he seems very smart and scientific and still keep an open mind. >>>>I agree with your premise that the “signal” in cables and power cords can be affected by external vibration. So it would not be very surprising that any device or object could affect the sound - even when applied to a non-audio circuit. In fact I designed a product that reduces vibration on UNUSED NON-AUDIO WALL OUTLETS. The mechanism of how vibration distorts the signal in cables and power cords is still unclear. As we’ve seen on a great many threads here there isn’t much consensus what the “signal” is. So a lot of things audiophiles do to improve the sound are a little bit mysterious. Suspending components and cables, applying little dots to windows and walls, using maple 🍁 platforms under amps, damping fuses, damping transformers, cleaning electrical contacts on non-audio wall outlets, isolating electronics, isolating speakers, things of that nature. |
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