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Media tossed onto the trash?
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Jun 27, 2021 20:09:29   #
elliott937 Loc: St. Louis
 
Usually the pair would be 3 1/2 and 7, or 7 and 15. I've not heard of the low speed and top speed. Saying that, recording, and playing back at 15 gives amazing sound quality, to include dynamic range not possible at slower speeds.

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Jun 27, 2021 20:21:00   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
lbrande wrote:
My reel to reel is a 2 speed, 3 1/2 and 15 ips. In the 70s it depended on what you wsnted to do. Mine is common.

Hmmm. Mid to late 60's mine was 3-3/4 or 1-7/8.

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Jun 27, 2021 23:37:01   #
Mr. SONY Loc: LI, NY
 
I still have my LINN LP12 with a RATA kit, a Rega RB900 tonearm, Shure XV15Vxmr (the last of the series) Gold Aero db45 Signature head amp.
And over 800 records.

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Jun 27, 2021 23:56:42   #
lbrande
 
Mr. SONY wrote:
I still have my LINN LP12 with a RATA kit, a Rega RB900 tonearm, Shure XV15Vxmr (the last of the series) Gold Aero db45 Signature head amp.
And over 800 records.


Linn Sondek. The pinnacle of turntables. Even today.

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Jun 28, 2021 05:52:11   #
Terkat
 
Hi again Elliot,

Can you believe the man (William "Bill" Lear) who was behind the design of the fabulous Lear jet series of biz jets was also responsible for the disastrous "8 track" music device? Oh well, 'ya win some and 'ya lose some. I actually spent a few thousand wonderful hours piloting a Lear 35 for a fairly large Health Care company here in the North Central part of the country. Absolutely beautiful aircraft (often referred to as the "executive mailing tube" as early versions were slightly cramped but the 500+ knot cruise speed was impressive) and a terrible music reproduction system.

Terry

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Jun 28, 2021 07:18:59   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
Mr. SONY wrote:
I still have my LINN LP12 with a RATA kit, a Rega RB900 tonearm, Shure XV15Vxmr (the last of the series) Gold Aero db45 Signature head amp.
And over 800 records.

Haha, My tuner/amp & deck were SONY!

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Jun 28, 2021 08:07:27   #
rlv567 Loc: Baguio City, Philippines
 
Longshadow wrote:
Reel-to-Reel at 7½ ips was even better sound quality!


My first reel-to-reel was a wire recorder. My first computer disk was an 8 inch floppy. My first computer hard drive was in an enclosure the size of a washing machine, sitting on the floor (not actually mine; I was working in a computer store at the time – we sold mostly IBM and Epson PCs, and the hard drive was for the IBM).

Loren - In Beautiful Baguio City

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Jun 28, 2021 08:26:49   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
rlv567 wrote:
My first reel-to-reel was a wire recorder. My first computer disk was an 8 inch floppy. My first computer hard drive was in an enclosure the size of a washing machine, sitting on the floor (not actually mine; I was working in a computer store at the time – we sold mostly IBM and Epson PCs, and the hard drive was for the IBM).

Loren - In Beautiful Baguio City


Amazing how everything shrunk isn't it!
I started out doing R&D work on aluminum platters about the size of an LP record. Some disk heads were about the size of a dime. Now you can hardly see the disk drive heads.

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Jun 28, 2021 18:43:12   #
Mr. SONY Loc: LI, NY
 
Longshadow wrote:
Haha, My tuner/amp & deck were SONY!


My camera is a SONY.

Not anything in my stereo.

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Jun 29, 2021 15:30:18   #
PhotogHobbyist Loc: Bradford, PA
 
elliott937 wrote:
Since there was a discussion earlier today about a new Window's OS required a member here to purchase a new video card, so I felt compelled to my fellow members to share some thoughts about ... maybe we don't have to toss our hardware into a landfill if it, and its software, serves us well.

Let me share more 'food for thought', coming from my own students, and from my regularly listening to a radio station from London. Here it is:

Remember how, who, sales people? marketing departments? All those people?? Remember how we were "told" to toss all our vinyl records into the trash? DVD and BluRay movies? Compact Discs? And along with those pieces of 'software' (e.g. LP records, movie discs, and CDs), also toss CD players into the landfills, along with DVD/BluRay players, turntables/cartridges, etc. We were ""told"" toss all this into the trash and join the "new era of media"?? Remember that over the past 10 or 20 years?

In all fairness, I must say there are some advantages of being able to access a movie or digital book, literally, anywhere. But, all that stuff we were "told" to toss in the landfill?

Well, here is a reality update. My college students are purchasing LP records every day of the week, and turntables too. They've been doing this for more than the past ten years I've been teaching. Audiophile magazine shows ads for dozens and dozens of turntables and cartridges, some with shocking prices. Turntables and LP records are not gone or even going away ... they are on their way back, and doing quite well. As I listen to my favorite radio station from London, I'm hearing the artist there are insisting that their new music recordings must be delivered not only on the (1)Internet as downloads, but are insisting they they are also made available as (2) CDs and (3)LP records. I'm even hearing the there is a market for cassette recordings. I'm shocked to hear that, but apparently in middle European cities, they are available there.

So, my fellow members, don't be pushed so easily with the philosophy of "toss away everything you own, and replace it with what sales people say we should be purchasing".

I thought you'd like to know, I thought you 'should know' about how LP records and turntables are very much alive. And after studying this typic of Dynamic Range, for anyone who would like to experience Concert Hall Realism in their own home, the only media to deliver that is a compact disc.

I thought you would like to know all this.
Since there was a discussion earlier today about a... (show quote)


Good to know. I've lived many years with the philosophy of: "Use it up, wear it out. Make it do or do without."

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Jun 29, 2021 15:47:46   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
PhotogHobbyist wrote:
Good to know. I've lived many years with the philosophy of: "Use it up, wear it out. Make it do or do without."


If it still meets ones needs and works, why get rid of it?

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