dead quiet


I read this a lot that one's system is dead quiet..Is this at all possible when playing phono? what does it really mean?
ditto
Agree with Audiofeil, my system is dead quiet with phono and I'm not surprised Bill has achieved the same result.

I'm confused as to why so many people find this hard to accept. There are half a dozen guys in my local audio group that have dead quite phono playback.

Granted all these systems are different and perform to widely varying qualities, but with each there is no noticeable difference in playback noise between CD and LP, unless it's a bad record with pops or surface noise.

That being said, the number of times in a four or five hour music session where a pop or click can be heard in my system would amount to about one or two per hour average.

A few milliseconds of noise for hours of superior playback is a fair trade. Some people obsess and strain, just waiting to hear the tiniest flaw. I had a visitor about three years ago that was like that.

At first he refused to believe that what he was hearing was my LP, because the CD was playing too. I sometime switch between the two during music sessions.

After repeatedly lifting the tonearm and proving the music was the turntable, he spent the remainder of the night leaning forward, trying to find a flaw. After and two and a half hours, while playing an older Jazz LP, there was a click.

The visitor jumped from his seat and exclaimed "I hear a pop."

I hope his Porsche never gets a bug hit on the windshield. No doubt he would exclaim "Porsche no good, ruined view of road," and sell the car.
Thank you Clio09, your post must have appeared while I was composing my response.

Thank you for the kind words, I could have just let your post stand and not posted mine if I had waited a few minutes :^).
Presuming you have done all your homework , randomly selected digital software will sound quieter than randomly selected LPs. Its all about lazer's 0's &1's. However, LPs will present a "wider-screen" affect to the music with more ambient cues , more hall affect in a more natural presentation than digital. There will always be a selected situation or so where a dealer can demostrate "dead quiet" more effectively than the average audio-head. That is a part of the JOB , no offence should be taken. Dragging a needle over a vinyl trench has inherient noise related issues. Keeping that noise below listening levels separates the lo-fi and hi-fi'ers. For me,its all about comittment to the media and the machines.
Actually any "audio-head" can achieve dead quiet with the proper combination of components I outlined earlier. It's not a selected siutation, magic, or pipe dream.

And certainly not relegated or restricted to dealers. With more experience you'll learn this.

I should add that quality ac power is important as well.
Perhaps for all of you who posted that a dead quiet system is achievable..would you we able to share how it can be achieved..
I do not have a dedicated line and wondering if that is a good start..
I love what I hear from my system except that between playing and while changing record..the speaker has some noise that is volume dependent..
I have eliminated 98% of its hum but as one of you suggested I am not done with my work ..please advise