[linux-audio-user] Re: Companies Refusing to Release/Permit Linux Drivers

Chris Bannister mockingbird at ihug.co.nz
Sun Mar 19 04:03:31 EST 2006


On Sun, Mar 19, 2006 at 12:51:53AM -0500, Gene Heskett wrote:
> AFAIK, any old dish soap that comes out of a bottle today will be fine.  
> Dishwasher soap OTOH, is pretty darned caustic, which probably won't do 
> the label (or the velvet & your skin for that matter) any good at all.  
> Use the velvet going with the grooves, and rinse with lots of warm 
> water at kitchen faucet spray pressures before the final rinse with 
> distilled.  Its clean when you can see rainbows in the grooves as it 
> dries.  Note however that I'm referring to vinyl records, not old 
> shellac 78's which will absorb an amazing amount of water.  Those I've 
> never used more than a velvet pad and just dampened it, rinseing it out 
> when it shows dirt.  Back velvet, not showing the dirt all that well 
> shouldn't be used.  If you can find it, a light colored mohair 
> frizay(spelling checker please) would be even better as its fibers will 
> stand higher and straighter, reaching into the grooves even better, but 
> be gentle with it too.

Thanks for the info. 

> Removing as much grit from the grooves as you can, before its pounded 
> into the vinyl by the passing of the diamond needle, is a very 
> desirable thing.  Once embedded in the groove walls, its essentially 
> there forever.  A well produced LP of yesteryear, on a good turntable & 
> good arm & needle, can easily do 55+ db of snr, with some approaching 
> 70 db, but they were rare indeed.  That takes either a weathers 
> turntable, or an old fairchild battleship but I doubt any of them 
> survive today.  Today, Techniqs is the best but its 20 db noisier than 
> those were and has arm resonances you can actually see.  Its a lost art 
> I'm afraid.

I like the Linn Sondek but as far as I know you can't play 78's, You
could only play 45's by adding an attachment to the motor spindle.

Thanks for the insight. When I worked for Telecom, I commisioned some
broadcast circuits from the local radio station and there were a few old
broadcast magazines from the 60's and they were interesting reading, esp
the techniques that were used with what little was available at the
time.

-- 
Chris.
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