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Re: arsclist Stereo or Mono Transfers of Mono Discs?
Date sent: Fri, 22 Jun 2001 15:29:06 -0700
From: Tom <tom@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: arsclist Stereo or Mono Transfers of Mono Discs?
Send reply to: ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> When making archival copies of 78s and mono 45s and LPs, should one
> make stereo or mono copies.
----- This opens a can of worms, and it not only depends on how
you obtain your mono signal (by a dedicated mono pickup or a
stereo signal summed). Several factor influence the result:
-- How was the original record cut? Was the tiny cutting face of the
cutting stylus truly radial (which was usually the case for
professional cutting with suction to remove the string of cut
material - swarf in English, chips in American) or was it angled to
direct the swarf toward the centre to be collected by a circular
brush (which would be the case for private disc cutting)?
-- How is the replay today? Is it radial or tangential tracking? In
radial tracking there are maximum two places (radii on the record)
where the signal picked up from the two flanks of the groove are
identical in time (no difference between them), provided the original
groove was cut with a radial face to the cutting stylus. In tangential
tracking the signals will be the same all the time, provided the
stylus really travels along a radius.
-- Which kind of stylus is being used? Is it spherical or truncated
elliptical or even line contact? If the latter is used, the vertical
tracking angle has to be quite well fitted to the vertical tracking
angle of the cutting stylus. Note that RCA Dynagroove was
predistorted so that a spherical stylus is mandatory to obtain an
undistorted signal.
You could say that by obtaining two signals, i.e. stereo, you can do
more manipulations afterwards, and that may be an advantage.
The quality of your stereo signal would depend very much on the
channel separation over the whole frequency range (not just 1000
Hz). Here optical replay via the ELP Laser Turntable may provide
astounding results. For 78 rpm records it turns out to be an
advantage to use mono left channel only, because that is in many
cases much less noisy (worn) than the other. In such cases you
would not want to use the other signal.
However, the sound from a good stereo reproduction of a mono
record using really good loudspeakers (electrostatics) is also
astounding: provided the tracking and the angles mentioned are all
well adjusted, the mono signal sits firmly straight in front of you,
and the noise is distributed reasonably evenly and very much to the
sides which means that you can focus better on the mono signal
as such.
So all in all, I would generally prefer stereo, with the above provisos
- at least until someone plays me a mono signal obtained via e.g.
an Ortofon A or C head (a mono moving coil design with a very high
vertical compliance).
I hope to have shed some light on the worms!
Kind regards
George Brock-Nannestad
Preservation Tactics