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I can make one keen observation that I believe most will agree with and that applies to all music reproduced by a system, regardless of the kind of source you are using (CD, DVD, SACD, vinyl, tape):- the quality of the playback absolutely depends on the quality and type of mastering done on the recordinig itself.As an extension of this, I think it is immediately obvious that a CD mastered better than a record has the potential to sound better. Yes, the vinyl does have an inherent flow and fluidity to it that can be missing on a CD, but "musically" and "emotionally" the CD can trounce vinyl on occasion.Now the corrolary to this is, if the mastering for both mediums are the same, the record will sound better to most ears, given reasonably decent components are used in the comparison and they are set up correctly.Comments? Disagreements?Bob
woodsyi, we already established your affair with Ms. Dewars...so, of course, there is no difference in your turntable systems
Ha - this is a play on a highly contentious topic I raised a few weeks ago called 'All CD Players sound the same. All CD Players sound the same?' In it, a member claimed I was being a bit too severe in my statements, and that how would I feel if someone made a topic called 'All turntables sound the same. All turntables sound the same?So, here it is. Was is member 'rajacat' that offered that dare, perhaps So, I offer this statement and categorically deny it as being anywhere near true. All turntables sound different due to a plethora of mechanaical and electrical realities that exist in spinning ye' old disc. To whit: 1. Cartridge/arm interaction. Too much weight, too little weight, too much compliance, too little compliance2. Thorough vinyl cleaning3. Differences in stylus construction, diamond quality, and tip shape4. Belt, direct or rim drive - quartz lock, servo drive, 33, 45, 78 rpm's5. Gimbal, unipivot, tangenital...9", 10", 12" arms6. Physical isolation, and as much as you can afford, is needed7. Capacitance and impedance loading8. Moving magnets, irons, coils, strain gauge cartridges9. RIAA equalization and 36db+ amplification; outboard phono, phono section in your pre-amp, step-up and or transformer. Each wire length adds capacitance which you have to figure back into the vinyl equation with most/many cartridges10. Stylus wear11. Arm geometry: VTA (vertical tracking angle), VTF (vertical tracking force), azimuth, platter levelling12. Suspended, non-suspended, high mass, or low mass decksWhew Ya'll get the idea...I may have even missed some. But, you get the idea. There are simply too many variables for any turntable to sound the same.Once you dial in the vast majority of the above as well as they were engineered to, you wil have a superior playback device to the CD player. You wil never achieve natural treble reproduction with a CD player - that fact alone disqualifies it from succeeding as a high quality music format. Certainly, it is more convenient....but beyond that it has very little sonially to offer as a high quality playback medium. DVD-A is a truly meaningful advance in digital recording and playback technology - so please don't paint me as some anti-digital person. I'm pro music.....and, quite unhappily I might add.....the old turntable, with all it's many fatiguing facets of performance needing maximization excells as a high quality, high resolution format. It's only close digital competitor is DVD-A today.So, in summary: * Every turntable sounds different* Once set up properly and at least average component pieces used, it will safely trounce any CD player for all it's musical qualities* So, spend as little as possible on either format to find acceptable sound. But, if reproducing music accurately and finding musical bliss is your goal....spend more on your turntable setup and less on your CD playback.If you've never owned a turntable or at least listened intently to one or several over time - please refrain from commenting here. You won't possibly know what your missing and would have no basis to comment or cajole here. Please don't ask me to re-clarify my position or parrot back mine, please state your own position and where I may be in error.Now, let's have fun with this and let's not let it get contentious. If you differ with me, please make rationale, consistent and solid points why either CD players sound different or in some way sound superior to vinyl.John / TCGwell my downstairs system uses a Marantz 8260, and a Jolida CD100a for digital music. I use a "Final Tool" for a turntable with a Grado cartridge. Needless to say the T.T. is better than the two CD players (SACD or whatever), but I just took delivery of a new Yamaha DVD-A player as well as a small LCD monitor. This setup will replace the Jolida, and the Marantz will also do redbook via a DAC from the digital outputs. I didn't buy it to replace the SACD player, but to complement it. It seemed that everytime I went SACD shopping I always found DVD-A disc that I wanted to hear. I never gave the slightest thought to a digital unit ever sounding better than my analog unit, and don't expect it to.more on this new adventure latergary
'If you differ with me, please make rationale, consistent and solid points why either CD players sound different or in some way sound superior to vinyl."I could have sworn that I read something along those lines here recently http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=37280.0