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Re: [ARSCLIST] Lossy compression losing quality (was Re: [ARSCLIST] Pristine Audio and the Milllennials . . .)



To Roger's point about a good-quality USB turntable. I agree it's only a matter of time. There's no rocket science involved. It's simply a turntable, RIAA preamp, A-D converter and USB interface, likely on one printed circuit board. Your big challenges, from a quality standpoint, are really in the RIAA preamp. It sits close to the turntable motor and mechanics, and it sits next to the high-frequency signals of the USB interface. The A-D stuff from line-level analog is well known and cheap now. So is the USB. I would say the big cost centers in these units are the cartridge and the preamp, so I bet a good one can't be made for $150, but if you get in the $500 range, no reason it couldn't be done.

Perhaps more useful -- and I've been surprised no one has done it, would be an external box with an intergrated RIAA preamp, A-D converter and USB interface. The only reason I can think that this hasn't been done is that the market for "putting my LPs into my iPod" is too limited to justify a Chinese factory production run.

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- From: "David Lennick" <dlennick@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, December 15, 2007 5:00 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Lossy compression losing quality (was Re: [ARSCLIST] Pristine Audio and the Milllennials . . .)



Shures are excellent but they don't manufacture the SS35E stylus any more. I'm hoarding the few I have. I also use Stanton because I got a wider variety of tips for that one, but the Shure is my only choice for Diamond Discs and transcriptions. On t'other hand, the 2.0 or 2.1 mil truncated elliptical stylus for the Stanton 500 will track Pathes without leaving the groove.

dl

Roger and Allison Kulp wrote:
Sures are the best all-around cartridges for 78s.There aer better sounding ones,from an audiophool standpoint,but Sures haven't been on the market longer than many collectors have been alive,for nothing.USB 'tables are a new beastie.A really good quality one is only a mater of time.


Roger




Goran Finnberg <mastering@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: Steven C. Barr:

1) Either use a "record player" with a ceramic cartridge, as I do (NOT recommended for LP's...!)...and redirect the cartridge output into the "Line In" jack(s) of your computer sound card..

Ceramic cartridges needs to be correctly loaded for proper frequency response.

Something like 1 megohm is the proper load, anything less and the bass
response suffers greatly.

You will not see 1 megohm input impedance on any soundcard that I know
of.

So this is quite suboptimal indeed.




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