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Hi John,It would take a lot of force and possibly a bit of heat to push vinyl around like cake frosting. While it is certainly possible to intentionally or accidentally deform a vinyl groove as you describe, for example, by dragging an ice pick through it, I doubt it can happen after two or more plays within 24 hours with a clean LP, pristine stylus, proper tracking force, etc.In the photo that shows the LP groove after 200 plays with Stylast, do you think those 200 plays were spread out over 200 days? If not, shouldn’t we see signs of significant damage?
What about DJ's when they are cueing up a record?Not only is the vinyl played once, but the first beat of a record may be played 20 times or more within a matter of minutes.Most DJ's dont report significantly audible record wear for a couple of years, so long as a decent setup cart is used and the records are regularly cleaned.
Quote from: PJWhat about DJ's when they are cueing up a record?Not only is the vinyl played once, but the first beat of a record may be played 20 times or more within a matter of minutes.Most DJ's dont report significantly audible record wear for a couple of years, so long as a decent setup cart is used and the records are regularly cleaned.when do dj's cue up a record on their audiophile rig, go sit in the sweet spot, close their eyes & relax for 20 minutes? doug s.
Few would do this, but all would record their mixes and play them back.A few would play them back on decent setups (mines not top end, but it's pretty decent), and most do care, at least to some extent about sound quality.Few would care about the sound quality to the extent that users of these forums do, but given the cost of vinyl ($US10 per song), and the fact that DJ's probably wear them out 50x faster than anyone here (faster if they scratch), to most DJ's vinyl wear is a real issue and I have never heard any of them mention such a thing.(That and from a pure thermodynamics point of view it makes no sense).
That Cardas\Stan Ricker test LP said it was pressed on some kind of super-hard vinyl for repeat-play burn-in friendliness. Wait a minute, we've got 180G vinyl, remastered releases, 5.1 re-releases, SACD re-releases hmmmm...now with "Hard Vinyl" releases we could issue yet another pressing of Dark Side Of the Moon! YESSS! Kick ass!
While I don’t buy into the “once in 24-hours only’’ theory, I do feel that the needle must get bloody hot during it’s washboard trip through a typical record groove. I have absolutely no idea how long a typical LP’s groove is from start to finish, but I suspect it’s over a kilometer? So, just imagine, rubbing [any] super-hard object, non-stop, over a microscopically rough surface for 20 minutes strait – that must build up some serious heat. I wonder if anyone has ever pointed a non-contact, heat-sensing ...