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David, you and I are out of touch. Accuracy from vinyl, why? Record players are for romance, warmth and sweetness, and to own extremely cool looking stuff. Nothing beats an elegantly appointed table with a cart that looks like a bird of prey or a space module. Mount your gargoyle and align it if you must, I just want to look at it.
Trilobite eh? a nasty lookin horseshoe crab kinda thing. I'm sticking with the youngsters. Neo Pterosaur has a certain ring to it, like a cheap tonearm. Besides, that was one bad-ass bird or flying reptile whatever. Grew to 50' can you imagine? Like a flying killer whale. That's how Fred Flintstone died. Pete Pterosaur swooped down and that was all she wrote for poor Fred. Yabba dabba.....And here I thought I was being factious. Jeff, you have a point. "If one is looking for an experience that will give the most musical satisfaction, give vinyl a listen." Well said.Neo Pterosaur
I think we are lucky to still have cartridges made by Dynavector and Audio-Technica in the marketplace given economic downturn in 1991. Scotty
The other is more controversial. He said that vinyl sounds best because it's the only playback source that generates its own signal. All other sources require a separate power supply. I don't know about that one. It's probably a subject for a long contentious thread.
I'm sure Art means the original signal at the source. The magnet/coil interaction generates that initial signal. There are other power supplies along the amplification chain, of course. In the June issue of Stereophile he writes, "Every other medium in existence - even analog tape - depends on an external power supply to create a source signal."Check it out. No matter what you think of Stereophile or Art Dudley, it is an interesting column. I'm surprised it hasn't garnered more internet debate.
When Tony Cordsman was writing for Stereophile his cartridge reviews were very concise and included a complete set measurements. Ah for the good old days when reviewers of phono cartridges actually produced some facts to balance out their hyperbole.Scotty