them being for courses and such.
me i prefer to be able to listen to music.couldnt give a monkees what format so long as it plays
Encarta speaks bollocks then.speccyteccy wrote:From Encarta:
"Monaural and stereophonic records have different types of grooves. In mono records, both the frequency and amplitude of the signal are stored as side movements in the groove. Only one channel is present. In stereo records, two separate channels are present in one groove. The side movements in the groove store the information for one channel and the vertical movements in the groove store information for the other."
This way a stereo record would not be playable on a mono set or vice versa an ancient mono record would play on a stereo record player on only one channel. Everybody with a certain age would remember all records of a certain era (the sixties/seventies) were labeled "stereo (also playable in mono)" hence the Encarta info is bollux on this point.In stereo records, two separate channels are present in one groove. The side movements in the groove store the information for one channel and the vertical movements in the groove store information for the other.
[/quote]C00kie wrote:This way a stereo record would not be playable on a mono set or vice versa an ancient mono record would play on a stereo record player on only one channel. Everybody with a certain age would remember all records of a certain era (the sixties/seventies) were labeled "stereo (also playable in mono)" hence the Encarta info is bollux on this point.In stereo records, two separate channels are present in one groove. The side movements in the groove store the information for one channel and the vertical movements in the groove store information for the other.
Both channels are picked up from a set of coils that have an angle of 45 degrees with the record, but 90 degrees with each other. If the needle only moves up/down, it is equally picked up by both coils. If the needle moves in a pane of 45 degrees it is only picked up by one of the coils.
Meffy wrote:
Given the antiquated (pre-standard stereo) information in that entry, I wonder whether Encarta describes a computer as a device costing millions, requiring an air conditioned room, and requiring a crew of operators. It's from about the same epoch.
Meffy
Both vinyl an CD's have a frequency band much wider than what you can hear - It doen't matter.HoTRocK wrote:Vinyl is capable of reproducing a much wider spectrum of frequencies than a cd. Hence a better quality of sound. A cd has 'sampled' only a fraction of the existing frequencies originally played by the musicians whereas vinyl captures just about all frequencies.
Thats my twopenny worth anyway.
and im the opposite - electronic needs that blurring - while real instruments suit the crystal clear perfection of cdChase wrote:[
As for which sounds better, it's completely oppinion. I actually only think vinyl sounds better on vocal or instrumental music, when i would prefer a digital format on completely electronic music.
That's not true. A person with good high-frequency hearing can definitely hear frequencies higher than those a CD is able to capture. The old myth about humans not hearing above 20 kHz is a gross oversimplification of the truth. When it comes to hearing response, there is a fair amount of variation from individual to individual, and also some changes are brought on by illness (sometimes enhancing high frequencies, sometimes attenuating them.) Even if you pick a particular person's hearing response as the "standard", the high-end doesn't simply hit a brick wall at some "magical" "textbook number" such as 20 kHz. The high end of human hearing frequency response generally falls off much more gradually, therefore it is quite possible to hear frequencies beyond the "cutoff point", albeit at reduced sensitivities.Chase wrote:Both vinyl an CD's have a frequency band much wider than what you can hear - It doen't matter.
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