Vinyl sounds better (shots fired)


I was bored today on a support job so I made a meme. This isn’t a hard or serious conviction of mine, but I am interested in getting reactions 😁

 

https://photos.app.goo.gl/SEHyirjJEaNXydfu9

medium_grade

Except for the pops and clicks and getting up every 20 minutes. 

LOL!  I have been a dedicated digital person for years, although I have my vinyl collection from the '70's.  When I tried out a preamp with a phono preamp built in (VAC Renaissance V), I figured that I would check out my vinyl.  Now during the '70's, I had a good turntable (a Thorens) and cartridge, and cleaned my albums each use with a DiscWasher, so that they were well cared for.  Honestly, I found the vinyl to be a PITA.  There were crackles and pops and surface noise.  I had to get up every 20 minutes.  I then had to figure out what side I would play next.  Now, admittedly, my current turntable is on the lower end of the scale, but I found that digital sounded at least as good, was significantly more convenient, no extraneous noise, and Roon would curate new music without me having to get up.  So for me, vinyl is not worth the hassle, and a good digital solution is the way to go.

Vynil introduces a level of distortion that is pleasing to the ears of many, whereas other people prefer otherwise.

@squared80 Actually vinyl has extremely low distortion- much lower than any of the 'tests' show. The reason is because of how much feedback is used in the mastering process. My Westerex 3d system using the 1700 series electronics employed 30dB of feedback between the cutter head and the mastering amplifiers, which had a fair amount of feedback of their own, nested within the 30dB feedback loop.

If you've read any papers by Bruno Putzeys then you know the significance of that fact.

IOW the distortion comes in during playback; hardly any of that is actually on the LP. That distortion is highly variable depending on the playback equipment (starting with the platter pad, and uncontrolled variable in all the 'tests' and 'studies' I've seen) and its setup. All the so-called 'studies' over the last 50 years ignore this simple fact. As LP playback equipment gets better and the more care is taken to setup, the playback distortion goes down.

My point here is the use of 'Vinyl' in your post above renders the statement false since that isn't where the distortion is coming from.

@newton_john  That modest PC/DAC combo I spoke about is actually quite good and illustrates the unfair advantages that digital has over vinyl.  

The thing that makes the most difference in your sound is always the loudspeakers.