What do you mean you “heard” the turntable
Thing is, they are most likely hearing this set up on a completely different system in a completely different environment. So how can they claim it was the TT that made the difference? The way “synergy“ is espoused around here how can anybody be confident at all considering how interdependent system interactions are.
Can someone illuminate me?
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People keep running to “of course you can hear a turntable.” That’s not the question, the question is how can someone go to some other system and talk about how that specific turntable sounds better or worse than a completely different TT in a completely different system and make overreaching statements about how and why it is better sounding. |
According to Popper there is no theory independent observation. So ''I have seen with my own eye'' or ''I have heard with my own ears'' is no argument at all. What we hear or see our brain need to interpret in the context of some premisses. Take ''our'' scientist Lew as example. He own 5 TT's but neither of them is belt driven. Does he have some prejudice against belt driven TT? The most of his TT's are DD kind. So presumably he has some premises about drive systems in the sense of , say, quality. Can he hear any difference between his TT's by listening to them ''naked'' next to each other? Well this may be the case with his Lenco because its driving system may produce some ''rumble'' which is difficult to supress. That is why he made 100kg. plinth for the precious (grin). But hearing whatever from his DD TT's is not probable. This would imply that something is wrong with the one with, say, sound on its own. So this thread is at least not clear formulated. One can only ''hear'' an TT in combo with an record , tonearm and cart. The last mentioned 3 are those which (re)produce sound. |
At what point do turntable noise and speed issues become inaudible to human hearing? Some of the latest Technics specs are staggering. What more is left for the turntable to do? "For wow and flutter most turntables were (and still are) around .1 to .3%. The SP-10 and SL-1200 were less than .025%." "Remember the wow and flutter rating of less than .025%? Well now it’s less than .015%, which is considered the measurement limit. Read that again. Rumble is now down to -92 dB" https://www.osirisstudio.com/home/2018/1/12/technics-sp-10 |
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