I think there is some confusion on this topic, mainly for some newbies but maybe we should have a short discussion on the subject and you guys can comment if you want.
The strobe disc has been designed to help identify speed issues with turntables. They are specific to speed (33 1/3, 45, etc) and to cycle of electricity.
The first thing about a strobe disc is having the right light source. An incandescent lamp will not work for this application as it's light source is continuous. Because it's a filament, it glows regardless of the cycle. The filament is seeing the 60 cycle hit, but reacts way too slow to get a real stroboscopic effect.
The fluorescent lamp is the correct light source for this task. This lamp reacts quickly to the cycle change in the electricity and the lamp actually goes on and off 60 times per second. Kind of like watching a movie. It's really made of individual still frames, but played fast enough, looks like actual motion. Same with the strobe disc.
The disc is designed with speed (RPM) and cycle (60hz) in mind, 50 hz in other nations.
The strobe lines are in a specific place and degree so that as the table is spinning and the lamp is busy flickering at its 60 cycle on and off rate, the lines of the disc are in the same position as the light "comes on".
If you view just one one spot of the disc when it's running under fluorescent lights, the lines turn into a gray colored band. Inside the band are darker appearing lines that appear to stand still. If you have a DD turntable with speed control, you can demonstrate this easily by adjusting the speed up and down, observing the line behavior drifting to the right when the speed is slow and drifting to the left when the speed is too fast.
Is this a good explination or can you guys add to it?
Wayner
