I love the the fact that I can obtain vinyl at garage sales cheap. Most of them aren't in great shape, but compared to the cost of streaming, it's really a pretty good deal. I also like the fact that having a turntable means being able to play some obscure things that you can't find elsewhere. I do have a decent Technics SL 1200 family turntable with a few different cartridges to choose from, so it helps that I can make even pretty beat up records sound pretty good. But I still think CDs sound the best, along with lossless digital files (24/48 and up). When I'm into the music though, I really don't notice vinyl record flaws. Speaking of good deals, what about used CDs that play as well as the day they were made?!
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Mobile Fidelity claimed their records sounded better the more they were played with the Japanese vinyl they used. I never noticed any degradation in almost 40 years. I take care of my records though, and store them perfectly vertically. No liquid cleaners, just a dust brush, and 95+% of my records were purchased new. |
sokogear Mobile Fidelity claimed their records sounded better the more they were played >>>>>I cannot imagine why that would be. |
Not sure, maybe they are broken in after time? I can't say I think they sound better, but they sound the same to me. I have bought a few used ones and they don't sound as good as the ones I originally bought. I think most people in general do not take very good care of their records. I use MFSL sleeves and several years ago started using jacket sleeves (not nearly as important) and a month or so ago got box sleeves for my UHQRs and a Kind of Blue box set. (Even less important since they already have the box, inner spongy packaging sheets, inner jackets, and record protectors). Outer boxes were getting worn. |
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- 65 posts total