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Recommendation Needed


Grem

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Vinyls are hip again, so there are a lot of options, and many all-in one cheaper setups, with built-in speakers. My ex grabbed one for me a few years ago, just so that I could listen to a couple of old vinyls. Not an audiophile experience by any stretch, although I'm not sure that it's actually much worse than what the average consumer had access to when I grew up. For me, that's never been the point of vinyls. In fact, quite the opposite.

Same reason I like to pop in a 8 track tape to listen to old Elvis albums once in a blue moon. The flaws are part of the charm. I am not sure that I buy the idea that vinyl sounds "better".

Of course, you get what you pay for. This part hasn't changed. There are just a lot more options I would think.

Edited by Rain
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Too bad you don't have a reciever. Ikea has a turntable that got good reviews.

I've got an old Pioneer stack. It's nice to listen to AC/DC and other heavy rock on vinyl. It feels like there's more of that low register from vinyl.

I probably should fix the volume potentiometer and source switch on the reciever. It can take some time to jiggle them in position.?

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5 hours ago, jackson white said:

i need one as well, this startup seemed to have a modern take on it.

https://uturnaudio.com/

This is looking like a very good canidate!! Thanks!!

 

@Rain Not really going for "audiophile" either. Just wanting something to put older records on.

I remember listening to DSOTM on 8trk, IIRC there was a break in the middle of the solo for Time. Man I just thought about the click you would hear when the trk changed!! Hadn't thought of that sound in forever!!! 

 

11 hours ago, Kurre said:

listen to AC/DC and other heavy rock on vinyl.

I still remember the guy that I learned a lot of my guitar licks from bringing the BIB album to my house so we can learn it. He opened at the house. I never really was much of an AC/DC fan before BIB, but within the first few beats of BIB (first song) I was hooked forever!! We learned every song on that first side that day!! 

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3 minutes ago, Grem said:

I remember listening to DSOTM on 8trk, IIRC there was a break in the middle of the solo for Time. Man I just thought about the click you would hear when the trk changed!! Hadn't thought of that sound in forever!!! 

Man does that bring back memories!  I only had two 8-tracks:  Elton John's Goodbye Yellow Brick Road and Heart's Dreamboat Annie.  Arguably the most popular track on that Heart album was Crazy On You and, right in the middle, it changes track!  ?

I ditched the 8-tracks and never looked back.  I had well over 2,000 records when CD's came out and, after testing each against a really nice system, the records sounded so bad in comparison that they all got sold.

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1 hour ago, craigb said:

the records sounded so bad in comparison

I remember the first time I listened to DSOTM on CD, it was the first time that all I heard was the heartbeat. No hiss, no scratches, just pure silence. And when On The Run came on, I was sold by then!! Wasn't going back to vinyl. Or tape for that matter.

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My son gave me one of those 'ok' turntables with the built in amp.  Not anything close to audiophile quality. Not bad either. It has phono outputs to feed an amp.

I found an 8 record set of old radio comedians and it was perfect for that. Very mid range. Very little bass. 

 

Edited by Tim Smith
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13 hours ago, Starship Krupa said:

I had one of those! The filmstrip part broke early on, but the record player lived for a few more years. Until I started....experimenting on it.

LOL, I couldn't for the life of me remember the name of it and took a while for me to look it up. I got all the hand-me-downs from my older brother and sister, but I really liked the fact that turntable had 4 speeds to it (not sure I have ever seen a 16 1/2 rpm record in my life, but playing records on the wrong speed was fun as a kid).

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10 hours ago, mettelus said:

I really liked the fact that turntable had 4 speeds to it (not sure I have ever seen a 16 1/2 rpm record in my life, but playing records on the wrong speed was fun as a kid).

I have a story about that. This experience is burned into my mind.

When I first got mine, at age 5, my mother also gave me a kid's record called "The Ballad of the Headless Horseman," which sounded "fun" scary to me.

It came on a 7" with a small hole, and I had the Show 'n' Tell set to 33 1/3 because that was what I was used to from playing my mom's Sinatra records on her console (I was a weird kid; I really dug Sings Only For The Lonely and September of My Years).

The Headless Horseman record, though, was cut at 78, so when I put it on, all by myself upstairs in my bedroom, this terrifying "BWWWOOOOOOOAAAAAAAH" sound came out. Terrifying as in "I remember the details 56 years later" terrifying, and I ran out of my room not even stopping to turn it off. Fortunately it wasn't set on auto repeat (if the S+T even had that feature).

It was a great introduction to the power of raw sound to stir emotions, I gotta say.

 

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How clean your LPs are will have a far bigger impact than the difference between a low end and high end turntable. If you are even considering getting an all in one stereo with a turntable built in then it doesn't  matter which one you get. They all sound equally low fi.

I made my own LP wet vac system for like 50 bucks plus the the cleaning chems which will last a lifetime.

There was a massive impact on the sound quality after cleaning them.

I'll post pics later of what I made. There may be pics floating around the forum somewhere already.

Also the room will have a huge impact on sound quality just like recording. IMO speaker/room placement and how clean the LPs are have a far bigger impact than money thrown at high end gear unless you have golden ears and a perfect wave coming through your AC ... which nobody has unless you buy a $10,000 dollar wave regenerator. 

 

 

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Thanks for all the replies. She is not an "audiophile" (not that there's anything wrong with that!). SO I got something from Best Buy. An Audio-Technica turntable, a small Sony receiver,  Sony 5" 3 way speakers, a Sony 10" active subwoofer, a record cleaning set, and three new albums. She should be good to.go for a little while.  

The turntable is Bluetooth.  Which when paired with our Bose Bluetooth Soundbar would have worked fine. But she let me know she didn't want any digital/Bluetooth BS in her turntable. She wanted an "old-fashioned record player" 

So I ordered the other stuff to go along with the turntable.

I will update ya'll with my opinion as to the CD/Vinyl thing. 

I thought this was gonna be easy!!

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