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    #16
    So, a couple things you don't know about me. First, I actually write and record music. I'm already a snob when it comes to audio and production, so vinyl is really just a natural evolution for me. And in the last 6 months or so, I've spent over $2k on analog guitar gear, when I had a digital setup that sounded just as good and was more versatile. So again, vinyl is just par for the course.

    But moreso, if a kid in 2006 said "hey I want to get into paintball, what should I get?" You'd tell him, "don't waste your money chasing a fad?"

    ...So yeah, it's a dumb response.

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      #17
      Current setup:

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      Did some DJing (mostly hardcore & gabber) in a previous life, wouldn't mind getting back into it but there is no scene here anymore. Records are in file crates from Office Depot / similar. One of these days I'll get some real storage for them 🙄 Speakers are off to the right-hand side.

      side note- Good lord that is dusty. I'm almost embarrassed by it. Time to break out the vacuum!
      cellophane's feedback

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      • Brokeass_baller

        Brokeass_baller

        commented
        Editing a comment
        There was a gabber scene in Louisville? I wouldn't have expected that.

        Cleveland had a really good DnB scene for a while, and dubstep before Skrillex murdered the genre. And that's about it. You can find some bassline raves every now and then, but they're shitty bar raves. All the good places closed down. As far as I know, anyway.

      • cellophane

        cellophane

        commented
        Editing a comment
        Brokeass_baller Not much of one. I was the outlier at any party I played at. There are a few hardcore folks around, but nothing like in someplace like Chicago or NYC. The techno & house side of things here isn't too bad. Not much in the way of big events, but there are still some of us that dig it.
        edit: apologies on the late reply. haven't been on much.

      #18
      Originally posted by Magmoormaster View Post
      So, a couple things you don't know about me. First, I actually write and record music. I'm already a snob when it comes to audio and production, so vinyl is really just a natural evolution for me. And in the last 6 months or so, I've spent over $2k on analog guitar gear, when I had a digital setup that sounded just as good and was more versatile. So again, vinyl is just par for the course.

      But moreso, if a kid in 2006 said "hey I want to get into paintball, what should I get?" You'd tell him, "don't waste your money chasing a fad?"

      ...So yeah, it's a dumb response.
      I see that you blow lots and lots of money on stuff. I was never in doubt of that. That’s not relevant at all. Records are just as much for poor people as you.

      Why is vinyl “par for course”? Exactly what do you think records are? Some kind of coolness badge? It seems like you’re saying at some point you get so much gear that you level up and need a turntable? It’s not like there is a flow chart to follow somewhere that shows how to do what and when if you’re a real dude. It’s not an obligation.

      It’s not a matter of vinyl being in your future, it’s a matter of it not being in your past. It has nothing to do with being a musician or a gear whore. I’m also a musician and a gear whore. I didn’t buy a turntable because I made my first album and purchased my 20th bucket brigade. I have always had records because I’m a music fan and I’m fourtyseven! It would basically be impossible for me to not collect records in order to hear my favorite music in the original way that it came out. I have innumerable records of things that exist in no other format even now. What you’re saying is, “Hey guys, I’m thinking about getting into penny farthing bicycles and I know the first thing is I need a forge...”. It sounds...pointless. I *love* records, and I’m addicted to them. You aren’t because you don’t have any yet. This is the fork in the road. You actually see it in front of you. I don’t even know what my first record was. (Slade or Blondie, I’m pretty sure). I’m a DJ (on the radio) and I was born hooked so my library is so massive that it only makes sense to keep adding to it.

      Being a long time hardcore autococker person like you are, how many noob paintballers would you steer towards owning an autococker? For me the answer would be zero because i learned from building my sniper project that even though it turned out great I for sure should never have started it. There aren’t enough parts, the original scene is dead, I was never a part of it, I can never recreate it, it’s just an expensive gun I spent a ton of time on. It’s a great gun and I love it! But if I could do it all over again I wouldn’t. Do you want to be that guy but after selling off what used to be $10,000 worth of record stuff after the market crashes, long ago realizing you basically paid $50 an album just to add a ton of surface noise on top of whatever you’re listing to? To have 1/3 the SNR of a high res download that’s half the price? To have mono bass? A format that wears out a little more every time you play it? Why are you attracted to this? This is what I’d like to actually talk about rather than “dumb”, etc. I’m trying to have a real conversation here.

      You’re being so defensive, btw. Has nobody ever called you a poseur before? It’s OK, music fans rip on each other’s scenes all the time. That’s something that you’re going to have to develop a sense of humor about if you want to stay sane. After that “limited to the album format” line...you had it coming.

      OK, music humor, let’s see...what do you call a drummer with no girlfriend? Give up? HOMELESS, HA!

      Comment


        #19
        Originally posted by SignOfZeta View Post

        I see that you blow lots and lots of money on stuff. I was never in doubt of that. That’s not relevant at all. Records are just as much for poor people as you.
        Well, I'll consider that point missed. It has nothing to do with rich/poor, it has to do with the fact that I went very far out of my way for better/more natural/analogue gear when I already had a good solution. The parallel to digital music (I still buy albums on iTunes, I hate streaming) and vinyl should be pretty clear.

        Originally posted by SignOfZeta View Post
        Why is vinyl “par for course”? Exactly what do you think records are? Some kind of coolness badge? It seems like you’re saying at some point you get so much gear that you level up and need a turntable? It’s not like there is a flow chart to follow somewhere that shows how to do what and when if you’re a real dude. It’s not an obligation.
        Again, you seem to be laboring under the delusion that I'm only interested in vinyl for appearances, when I said pretty damn clearly that I'm an audio snob. Meaning, I want the higher fidelity vinyl offers.

        Originally posted by SignOfZeta View Post
        It’s not a matter of vinyl being in your future, it’s a matter of it not being in your past. It has nothing to do with being a musician or a gear whore. I’m also a musician and a gear whore. I didn’t buy a turntable because I made my first album and purchased my 20th bucket brigade. I have always had records because I’m a music fan and I’m fourtyseven! It would basically be impossible for me to not collect records in order to hear my favorite music in the original way that it came out. I have innumerable records of things that exist in no other format even now. What you’re saying is, “Hey guys, I’m thinking about getting into penny farthing bicycles and I know the first thing is I need a forge...”. It sounds...pointless. I *love* records, and I’m addicted to them. You aren’t because you don’t have any yet. This is the fork in the road. You actually see it in front of you. I don’t even know what my first record was. (Slade or Blondie, I’m pretty sure). I’m a DJ (on the radio) and I was born hooked so my library is so massive that it only makes sense to keep adding to it.
        And in 2006 when I started playing paintball, it wasn't in my past. When I bought my first cocker in 2008, it wasn't in my past. When I got into pump in 2009, it wasn't in my past. Seriously. Just because someone wasn't playing paintball in the 80s, they shouldn't be allowed to enjoy a PGP, by your logic. By that rule, this forum would have a total of 5 members.

        Originally posted by SignOfZeta View Post

        Being a long time hardcore autococker person like you are, how many noob paintballers would you steer towards owning an autococker? For me the answer would be zero because i learned from building my sniper project that even though it turned out great I for sure should never have started it. There aren’t enough parts, the original scene is dead, I was never a part of it, I can never recreate it, it’s just an expensive gun I spent a ton of time on. It’s a great gun and I love it! But if I could do it all over again I wouldn’t. Do you want to be that guy but after selling off what used to be $10,000 worth of record stuff after the market crashes, long ago realizing you basically paid $50 an album just to add a ton of surface noise on top of whatever you’re listing to? To have 1/3 the SNR of a high res download that’s half the price? To have mono bass? A format that wears out a little more every time you play it? Why are you attracted to this? This is what I’d like to actually talk about rather than “dumb”, etc. I’m trying to have a real conversation here.
        I jumped into autocockers in 08, long after the original "scene." And yes, I have steered many many people to autocockers, and continue to help them build and tune them. That was before the big mech trend, too. Most of them still prefer shooting their cockers instead of modern mechs, which most of them own as well. In fairness, most of them weren't noobs, but in this analogy neither am I.

        Originally posted by SignOfZeta View Post
        You’re being so defensive, btw. Has nobody ever called you a poseur before? It’s OK, music fans rip on each other’s scenes all the time. That’s something that you’re going to have to develop a sense of humor about if you want to stay sane. After that “limited to the album format” line...you had it coming.
        I'm being defensive because you're being an asshole. You didn't want to have a conversation about why I'm interested in the format, you just wanted to be a dick. And the "you had it coming" line is proof of that. So kindly see yourself out of this conversation. You are not being constructive at all.

        Comment


          #20
          Hang on...you’re under the impression that records are of a higher fidelity than...whatever you’re listening to now? That is the reason?

          Ok, here’s a fact you won’t notice on Instagram...records don’t sound that good. Even on the absolute best systems on earth, $250,000 gold plated linear tracking decks with their own poured concrete foundations with hand wound moving coil carts fitted into head shells of CNCed Zibra wood can’t even begin to sound as good as a $200 Sony Walkman such as the NW-Axx series plugged into the same stereo system. If your system is for real you’ll still get very entertaining full range sound from records, “better” than CD, because CD is too accurate and what people really think is “better” is not so much the sound of the record but the sound of the entire system including the record. It’s very much like an electric guitar. The pickups, the strings, the head, etc all contribute to the overall sound and people love the sensation of overly saturated low frequencies, not just more bass but more responsive bass. Like having a Rane DC 24 hooked to your CD player. It’s all thick and juicy and I love it...but it’s not accurate, it’s not high fidelity. It’s massively dynamically compressed compared to the file/tape it was generated from. These days true high fi comes from downloads (because Super Audio CD is very nearly dead now and the selection is terrible), for example the quad rate DSD version of the Akira soundtrack which I can assure does things totally impossible on wax. This is the sort of thing that’s so obvious from actual listening that nobody needs to even bother with the mountain of scientific measurements that prove what you hear. However high res digital downloads are very hard to show off and aren’t really playable on a lot of modern devices so many people don’t even realize they exist. I have multiple copies of ELP’s Trilogy on LP (I buy every copy I see) and none of them sound half as good as the 24-bit FLAC. If you value a low noise floor, stay the hell away from records. When everything gets quiet...you can hardly hear anything!

          As I pointed out, terrible signal to noise ratio. Terrible. It’s one thing for your fuzzy phaser pedal to make a roar of swirly sound with no strings played but an album is made to be heard as clearly as possible. Accuracy isn’t a thing in ones guitar rig (the artist is the reference) but it is in high fidelity. Beyond that it has loads of pops because perfectly clean grooves are a myth and static is created by the act of playing the records as well as a million other things in the room. Randomly defective records are surprising common and they all wear out eventually. And all these cool picture discs...they just sound like crap. Nonstop roaring hiss on picture discs, pretty much every single picture disc sounds really really bad.

          Do you know how much a Zerostat gun costs nowadays? As much as seven months of Tidal which will sound massively better 99 times out of 100 of your DAC is up to it.

          If I had to be honest the main thing I like about records is the physical act of playing them. Big pictures and track indexes, faster to cue than iTunes if the record is out already. No screens! I like being able to see how far along I am on a side just by looking where the tonearm is at the moment. I’m also a huge fan of print in general so having full sized covers is nice, if it’s something from before ~1987 (when CD shifted to being the “main” format) I pretty much always prefer an original LP. Some part of the experience is always lost after the first few print runs. Yes’s Relayer on anything but LP...never. You can’t roll a doobie in the crease of a AAC file after-all let alone count the steps on all those staircases...

          So I would discourage a kid from owning a cocker, but no, I wouldn’t steer a kid away from a PGP...UNLESS he actually somehow thought it would shoot better than his Empire Sniper. I would for sure try to save him from that disappointment. I would also explain to him that polished PGPs didn’t really exist back in the day and that if you buy one from a guy that way you’ll have to keep a rag in your pocket to constantly polish the thing all dang day if you want it so stay that way. (Records basically have to be brushed every time you play them, did I mention that? You also need this little brush for the needle...and also you need your cart for detail (prog) and your cart for loudness (modern pop music). You also need a really good stereo system in the first place to justify any of this, no brand-free D class amps or speakers pointed at your shoes...)

          Comment


            #21
            Originally posted by SignOfZeta View Post
            The pickups, the strings, the head, etc all contribute to the overall sound and people love the sensation of overly saturated low frequencies, not just more bass but more responsive bass. Like having a Rane DC 24 hooked to your CD player. It’s all thick and juicy and I love it...but it’s not accurate, it’s not high fidelity.
            Fun side note: I had to lookup the Rane DC 24 because I had no idea what it is, and the first paragraph in the manual for it is a riot:
            QUICK START
            Shredded, this document makes excellent packing material. In its present form, it makes interesting and useful reading. If you run out of patience quickly, at least read this part to make sure you don’t exterminate everything in a two mile radius by doing some-thing wrong.
            The whole manual has that same tone. Makes me want to buy something from Rane.

            Additional side note: I ❤ bass. I miss subs so big you could crawl inside of them... A full-on sonic massage. It turns the music from a 1-dimensional experience into a multi-dimensional experience. I do however despise all the light shows... give me super minimal lighting, a bigass sound system, and lots of techno and I'm set.

            Originally posted by SignOfZeta View Post
            If I had to be honest the main thing I like about records is the physical act of playing them. Big pictures and track indexes, faster to cue than iTunes if the record is out already. No screens! I like being able to see how far along I am on a side just by looking where the tonearm is at the moment. I’m also a huge fan of print in general so having full sized covers is nice
            I'm a big fan of the physical engagement of Vinyl as well. There is a level of intention to it that I don't get with a CD or digital file. I love digital files for the convenience of being able to carry several weeks/months worth of music in my pocket but it isn't the same from an experience standpoint. There is also the argument to be made (I mentioned this earlier) for the album as a body of work that is ceasing to exist. The streaming market has caused a lot of artists to evolve, for better or worse, to make short songs that in turn get a lot of plays (i.e. more $$) instead of making an experience to listen to. Part of what makes In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida cool is the fact that it goes on forever; it is the entire B-side of the album. That would never work as a mainstream song now.
            cellophane's feedback

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            • SignOfZeta

              SignOfZeta

              commented
              Editing a comment
              I’m not sure what the DC-24 was originally designed for, general studio compression use I guess...but at the radio station we use them on the end of the signal chain and it makes all the difference with new DJs who can’t match levels and such. It’s also SO good for a bass player on a budget. It brings a ton of life out of a $99 bass with shot strings.

            #22
            So now that the stimulus package has been passed and signed, I'm getting ready to pull the trigger on this. Here's what I'm looking at:

            Fluance RT80 Turntable
            Boundless Audio carbon fiber record brush
            fun record storage thing that matches my furniture

            And of course a handful of records. I already snagged "In a Safe Place" by The Album Leaf, and Periphery's Juggernaut, because some good deals popped up.

            I'm also looking at getting something along these lines:

            https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08JGWHBHL...v_ov_lig_dp_it

            I'm planning on using my M-Audio studio speakers to run the turntable, but they're typically hooked up to my laptop via a Focusrite Scarlet Solo. The RCA splitter would let me split the signal to the speakers between the turntable and the Focusrite. But if there's an easier/better way to do that, I'm all ears.

            Is there anything else I need or should get?

            Comment


              #23
              Whole point of vinyl to me is the lack of brick-walled compression on older analog mastering jobs. Most modern remasters are just plain awful, they are being tailored to so-so headphones tied to crap cell phone DACs. So you can hear your music on a crowded bus. It's just wrong, loudness wars ruined modern production IMO. When I vinyl hunt, i look for older prints.

              SNR, etc....measurements...only part of the audio listening story. Look at the sales and popularity of Schiit audio multibit DACs as an example. Amazon chi-fi stuff will beat it on a spec sheet but won't sound better.

              A preamp is your best bet if you have multiple input sources. Impedance levels (and signal levels) will be matched better and you will have a volume controller. You won't need anything fancy, passive one is OK.

              Comment


                #24
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                Vinyl was and always will be the perfect medium for music, you don’t need to spend multi thousands to enjoy it but obviously if you can afford it, why not.
                Vinyl is a different experience, it takes time to listen to a actual album, to look over the liner notes and be immersed in the whole concept.

                Still streaming is also awesome, want to hear something new or old right now, dial it up and there it is.

                My set up does it all and super happy with what I can afford. I still have every album I ever bought, since the 70’s.
                unfortunately I bought a lot cassettes when I started to drive, they didn’t fare as well and I lost a lot of good stuff, the good part, buying modern 180 gram albums are so much better sounding.
                Turntable, Music Hall mmf 2.2 I highly recommend Music hall, reasonably priced on the low end
                Receiver, Onkyo TX-8160 80 watts old school just 2 channels but it’s networked.
                My car SiriusXM or Pandora stream right through.
                CD, Onkyo C-7030 single disc.
                cassette, Onkyo TA-2600 old school rescue with a new belt.
                Onkyo dock for IPod with digital library
                main speakers
                Polk TS 440 T 3 woofer 1 tweeter ported towers
                Polk PSW-10 subwoofers
                Polk T-300 bookshelf speakers on the b channel.
                both sets are Bi-wired, I really don’t hear a difference, honestly.

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                  #25
                  Lol, I grew up with records and tapes. I find it simply astounding that you "youngins" actually desire to go backwards towards that shit. Nothing like an easily damaged format that degrades every single time you play it, physically, passes along every bit of dust, turn it up too loud and it skips possibly causing MORE damage. No thanks.

                  I got rid of all my vinyl YEARS ago. Don't miss it at all. I don't even keep CD's any more.
                  feedback

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                  • Grendel

                    Grendel

                    commented
                    Editing a comment
                    here, here!

                  #26
                  This is MCB, going backwards and using outdated technology is what we do.



                  My turntable came in a couple days ago. Been a super busy week so I haven't had much time to enjoy it. Only sampled a few songs from various records. So far, I haven't noticed any of the supposed quality differences between the clear or splatter records vs the standard black. that might just be due to the volume I'm listening at (mid 50s db). I'm definitely going to need a new platter mat though. My turntable came with a felt mat and it collects a lot of static, and usually sticks to the record when removing it. They all seem to cost about the same, so I'm thinking of going with cork since it supposedly sounds the best.

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                    #27
                    I know right! This whole website and the thousands of postings is dedicated to old out of date antiques, the guns not the guys pulling the trigger, but if the orthopedic shoe fits.....

                    Comment


                      #28
                      My wife wants a turntable to listen to old jazz records with all the snap crackle pops of worn vinyls. Sounds kinda nice, actually.

                      Comment


                        #29
                        You don't have to spend a lot. Its mostly cause you like the sound of the original recording and the art work. No remastering and it has all the pops and cracks you remember. Older music is supposed to sound like that.
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                          #30
                          Well, it's been about 6 months since I got my turntable and I am having a grand old time with it. Thought I'd share pics of some of my favorites so far.

                          Here are some cool limited edition pressings I have:


                          And my most played:


                          Periphery's Juggernaut Alpha/Omega sounds friggin incredible on vinyl.

                          Also just bought a record off of Discogs I never thought I'd find, Hiraeth by Faux Tales. Suuuuper excited about it. Paid more than I would have liked but given its rarity (100 total) I'm ok with it.

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                          • Magmoormaster
                            Magmoormaster commented
                            Editing a comment
                            Yikes those pictures looks like crap.

                          • MrKittyCatMeowFace

                            MrKittyCatMeowFace

                            commented
                            Editing a comment
                            I can see them good i think. Lol

                            Its fun to go through the motions of putting on a record especially if you really like the record your listening too.
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