Thanks Rugyboogie,
The video was very amateurish but I think....made its point.
Hollywood has not been ringing though which is puzzling?
You are one of the 'brave' ones amongst us....having purchased the Timeline only to find disillusionment with the macro accuracy of most belt-drive turntables.
However I believe the truth can help you.....and you happily have plans to correct the situation with the Verdier.
I certainly wish you luck.
Pryso,
Yes you are misunderstanding the principle of the Timeline as also Lew continues to do despite me trying to explain it on 2 or 3 occasions?
A turntable......any turntable......will not 'make up' for lost speed.
If a turntable did this......it would simply be unlistenable as it would never be revolving at the correct speed. This is a common misconception about servo-controlled DD motors.
A turntable must revolve at a 'constant' speed. If that 'constant speed is not exactly 33.3rpm......it is only a matter of 'pitch'.
When something occurs to 'alter' that speed momentarily.......it will almost always slow it down (stylus drag). When the motor detects that 'slow-down'....it will compensate to regain its 'correct' speed. It will NOT 'correct' that slow speed to another 'incorrect' FAST speed?
Thus the original 'altered' speed (due to stylus drag)....is a historical event that the turntable motor does not 'remember'.
The Timeline however.......will keep the record of that altered speed as long as it keeps revolving and thus the laser line will NEVER 'recover' to once again hit the mark on the wall.
This is the difference between a strobe and the Timeline. With a strobe....any speed change is so quick that a blink of your eye will simply miss it and the strobe has regained its 'correct' speed before you ever see it. With a strobe....there is no 'record' of the speed change.
With the Timeline.......a 'running' record is automatically kept and cannot be erased.
I hope this is somehow clearer........but the way many here are discussing the accuracy of different strobes to the way the Timeline is designed to function......simply leaves me open-mouthed :^O
The video was very amateurish but I think....made its point.
Hollywood has not been ringing though which is puzzling?
You are one of the 'brave' ones amongst us....having purchased the Timeline only to find disillusionment with the macro accuracy of most belt-drive turntables.
However I believe the truth can help you.....and you happily have plans to correct the situation with the Verdier.
I certainly wish you luck.
Pryso,
Yes you are misunderstanding the principle of the Timeline as also Lew continues to do despite me trying to explain it on 2 or 3 occasions?
A turntable......any turntable......will not 'make up' for lost speed.
If a turntable did this......it would simply be unlistenable as it would never be revolving at the correct speed. This is a common misconception about servo-controlled DD motors.
A turntable must revolve at a 'constant' speed. If that 'constant speed is not exactly 33.3rpm......it is only a matter of 'pitch'.
When something occurs to 'alter' that speed momentarily.......it will almost always slow it down (stylus drag). When the motor detects that 'slow-down'....it will compensate to regain its 'correct' speed. It will NOT 'correct' that slow speed to another 'incorrect' FAST speed?
Thus the original 'altered' speed (due to stylus drag)....is a historical event that the turntable motor does not 'remember'.
The Timeline however.......will keep the record of that altered speed as long as it keeps revolving and thus the laser line will NEVER 'recover' to once again hit the mark on the wall.
This is the difference between a strobe and the Timeline. With a strobe....any speed change is so quick that a blink of your eye will simply miss it and the strobe has regained its 'correct' speed before you ever see it. With a strobe....there is no 'record' of the speed change.
With the Timeline.......a 'running' record is automatically kept and cannot be erased.
I hope this is somehow clearer........but the way many here are discussing the accuracy of different strobes to the way the Timeline is designed to function......simply leaves me open-mouthed :^O