Is having speakers on the same surface as your turntable really THAT bad?

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  • Опубликовано: 29 дек 2018
  • Let's investigate another common turntable-related meme that sounds believable at first glance, but is blown way out of proportion by people who never actually bothered to test it -- even including some turntable manufacturers.
    #vinyl #turntable #speakers
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Комментарии • 589

  • @nickwallette6201
    @nickwallette6201 5 лет назад +196

    Cargo-cult wisdom. "Don't do it! I don't know why, but everyone knows it's bad!"
    Blanket advice given without context or rational thought is worse than useless. If this were a mass-scale critical issue, DJs at clubs with kilowatt sound systems would not be a thing. But they are, so.... maybe just use common sense and call it good.
    Reminds me of the "distortion kills speakers" adage. It does not. Thermal overload kills speakers. Over-excursion kills speakers. If neither of those physical symptoms occurs, you can play square waves until you go deaf and the speakers will be just fine. Heaven help you if you argue that logic in an audio forum though.

    • @ianyates7742
      @ianyates7742 5 лет назад +2

      Nick Wallette hi have you ever seen how they stet up the decks in the days of vinyl if they where pushing out that sort of power they used to suspend the decks with chances or place them on a thick bed of foam that’s how they and I overcame that problem

    • @MK-si7kq
      @MK-si7kq 5 лет назад +4

      If all you are concerned about is being able to play loud music in a club, then no, no one is going to care. However, you are dead wrong to insinuate that the speakers are not affecting playback - because they are. If you pumped classical music, delicate acoustic guitar, or high quality vocals through those systems - at those decibels - AND you had a discerning, concert-going audience, it would be unlistenable . People dont go to clubs to LISTEN to the nuances of the music. They go there to drink, dance, and hook up. How is that for logic?

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 5 лет назад +8

      Pretty good! You got pretty close to rational thought there. Be careful - you'll get kicked out of the Golden Ears club if you keep that up.
      In all seriousness, you're right - clubs aren't about nuanced listening. And I wouldn't dare insinuate (or even say out right) that there's no coupling at all between a loudspeaker and a nearby phono cartridge. Of course it affects playback. A farting frog down by the crick affects playback. The question is: to what degree?
      All systems have resolution. If the coupling is below the noise floor, it doesn't have a *meaningful* impact. If that discerning, cork-sniffing, holier-than-thine-MP3-player crowd went to a club and asked the DJ to spin Concerto #5 at 112dBA, I would imagine the sheer SPL would trigger the reflexive closure of their eardrums, thus probably negating the minimal influence of the loudspeaker-cart loop up until the point where it was one falsetto short of equilibrium and into the sharp squeal of positive feedback. Does it add distortion? Yes. As much as a cheap Peavey IPR being pushed into the rails, a horn tweeter experiencing thermal compression losses, or a repurposed gymnasium generating an acoustic comb filter that would dazzle the Dollar Shave Club guy? Not likely.
      For a REAL, above-the-noise-floor alteration of the signal through acoustic coupling, the impact of the speaker is going to have to be greater than the average level of the needle displacement by the record itself. Which insinuates that you've got the volume up there into "clubbin" territory. Which is a level to which no civilized listener would tread, right? It's up there in the "drink dance and get lucky" range.
      A fellow above commented about foam isolation. When you have a row of 18" Black Widows moving half an inch peak to peak, you've got enough percussive excitation to make a measurable difference to the ability of a needle to track its groove - even if you had that deck hanging in free space. And yet it does, well enough that nobody notices the error. Let's not pretend that some yahoo in his pinstripe pajamas needs to worry about interference from a set of 8" bookshelf speakers turned up halfway on a 5W tube amp. It absolutely will couple. And of course nobody can tell you it doesn't matter because everyone's hearing is different and "YOU can tell!" Fine. Good for you.
      All I'm saying is it's not the crime of the century for average Joe Listener, who just wants to listen to The Dark Side of the Moon. If a deck can COPE with Will I Am @ 6,000W in the same room, it can play near enough to perfect with 10W on the same occasion table.

    • @ianyates7742
      @ianyates7742 5 лет назад

      M K hi there it’s very nice to read a comment from someone who knows what he is talking about my point is and was in a hifi set up we are trying to get a true reproduction of the music, most people don’t listen to music it’s just there in the background. I used to dj and yes all they wanted was loud and thumping they didn’t know that poor styles trying to stay in the groove was working over time but I always tried to make it sound as good as possible, at home it’s a different at least for me it’s the quality
      of the music and not so much the volume. I listen eyes shut and chilled out
      Happy new year 👍👍

    • @ianyates7742
      @ianyates7742 5 лет назад +1

      M K yes you are right they don’t care but I always did and yes I know it caused distortion all I could do was try to minimise it

  • @sergiovela7686
    @sergiovela7686 5 лет назад +392

    Damn, not Even Obama can save himself from audiophile hate

    • @ukfmcbradioservicingTango21
      @ukfmcbradioservicingTango21 5 лет назад +66

      ....and Obama had it on a marble surface that is highly unlikely to transmit vibration from one component to another anyway!

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад +6

      @@ukfmcbradioservicingTango21 Thought exactly that :)

    • @ralphhoskins2115
      @ralphhoskins2115 5 лет назад +10

      Omg,, what if he had a crosley cruiser.... people’s heads would have literally exploded...

    • @mercurialmagictrees
      @mercurialmagictrees 5 лет назад +1

      Ralph Hoskins LOL yeah totally

    • @IPODsify
      @IPODsify 5 лет назад +4

      Imagine someone saying your setup "isn't expensive enough"

  • @tyttuut
    @tyttuut 5 лет назад +218

    You probably can't hear how terrible it sounds because your ears aren't fine-tuned enough to hear the placebo effect.

    • @NicksNameGoesHere
      @NicksNameGoesHere 5 лет назад +54

      I have this RUclips video on Vinyl and it definitely makes a huge difference when he plays the music

  • @MysteryMii
    @MysteryMii 5 лет назад +232

    Welp, time to avoid r/vinyl for the next 24-48 hours.

    • @bakonfreek
      @bakonfreek 5 лет назад +14

      That or pop some popcorn and enjoy the show.

    • @deletedaccount966
      @deletedaccount966 5 лет назад +18

      r/audiophile idiots are reporting this video

    • @MysteryMii
      @MysteryMii 5 лет назад +5

      Louis Joke’s on them. Multiple false reports will get their accounts deleted on RUclips.

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад

      Why do any of you even KNOW what they're talking about in the first place? I've seen the discussion and got bored in 3 seconds and never visited again. What I DO wonder about is (remember, I don't read the Reddit posts): why is this so specific for vinyl? And what's elitist about it? And yes, I've also met people who told me that a turntable setup that cost less than US$ 10.000 would sound even remotely good. Right....

    • @kamuy_1337
      @kamuy_1337 5 лет назад

      the reddit user who advise everyone to avoid cheap turntables u/slavikcc deleted his account.

  • @kocfuc1982
    @kocfuc1982 5 лет назад +210

    the reddit vinyl elitist are not going to be happy

    • @kidnamedfinger6323
      @kidnamedfinger6323 5 лет назад +3

      I post my setup on r/vinyl and the main concern was "THE VIBRATIONS!!!"

    • @MichaelGrey11
      @MichaelGrey11 5 лет назад +10

      Audiophiles: speakers and the turntable can’t be in the same room!!

  • @Skawo
    @Skawo 5 лет назад +221

    Ooh no, audiophile downvotes incoming.

    • @olik136
      @olik136 5 лет назад +6

      wow your comment isn't even worth $1000 and you are clearly the president of Hyrule- does your opinion even count?!?! 😂

    • @deletedaccount966
      @deletedaccount966 5 лет назад +3

      Hilarious
      www.reddit.com/r/vinyl/comments/ab5t0x/is_having_speakers_on_the_same_surface_as_your/

    • @rollingtroll
      @rollingtroll 5 лет назад +4

      Not even going to bother voting. This kind of testing, not hindered by any kind of knowledge, is just painful to watch.

    • @Skawo
      @Skawo 5 лет назад

      @Oli K
      My comment at least makes sense, as opposed to your angry gibberish; I haven't even expressed any kind of opinion with it.

    • @lazycrypt6893
      @lazycrypt6893 5 лет назад +23

      Clearly the test is not valid, he was not using cable rises made of unobtanium that cancel out the gravitational pull on the electrons and didn't connect his speakers with an 192 karat gold wires with at least 100k hours burn in.

  • @markhesse2928
    @markhesse2928 5 лет назад +100

    Obama's speakers looked just like the ones Techmoan bought for his 4-part series on how to assemble a budget Hi-Fi.

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад +8

      I think that's because they are :) Or very similar. They even are from the same brand :)

    • @grodenbarg
      @grodenbarg 5 лет назад +5

      at least Obama has some tastes in his audio setup. Judging by his setup, he probably does not, or cannot have loud music anyway. LOL

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад

      grodenbarg Hm, if Techmoan is to be believed, those Kanto’s are pretty loud 😀

    • @talesfromthelotuspodcast
      @talesfromthelotuspodcast 5 лет назад

      Hahahaha they did too

    • @talesfromthelotuspodcast
      @talesfromthelotuspodcast 5 лет назад +5

      @@grodenbarg he watches techmoan

  • @lmull3
    @lmull3 5 лет назад +60

    Funny enough at a record shop I used to work at, we used to have these gigantic Bozak speakers from the 50s that might as well have been pieces of furniture. We ran amplifiers and turntables on top of those speakers and it did generate feedback sometimes that could be eliminated with the subsonic filter on some of the amps we used. I would think that having your speakers on the same surface as your turntable is not a best practice by any means but it would really depend on the surface you have everything on and the speakers you are using. Probably not much of an issue for these smaller bookshelf speakers you see these days.

  • @Shippoyasha
    @Shippoyasha 5 лет назад +55

    I honestly don't understand the need to spend exorbitant amounts of money for the platter, turntable feet, dampening table, sound shield, etc when it all doesn't really matter at all. The amount of difference you 'might' get is so minuscule, it's absurd. You do not need to spend thousands of dollars to enjoy this hobby or get the 'audiophile' experience.

    • @mentalguy316
      @mentalguy316 5 лет назад +1

      It's a diminishing return relationship between audio quality output and money spent. Most people wouldn't spend $9 per gallon of gas even if it promises to promises to improve gas mileage by 11%. Most will still go for the standard price gas. Some can afford it, but that doesn't give them any right to make anyone else feel bad about what they can afford.

    • @ct1660
      @ct1660 5 лет назад +2

      I've practically spent $0 on my Acoustic Research turntable. Got it from Freecycle and didn't have to spend a fortune.

    • @musicman8270
      @musicman8270 5 лет назад +2

      Most turntables are very much over engineered, I consider myself an"audiophile" and my LP120 was bought on sale for 230 bucks, and I heard Carly Simon's voice weaken once, never heard that before. Why capitalism is great, you want a 4,000 table help yourself, main thing is to enjoy, nothing quite like analog .

    • @DejanTesic
      @DejanTesic 5 лет назад +2

      @@musicman8270 Yep, nothing is full of errors like analog. ;)

    • @ralphhoskins2115
      @ralphhoskins2115 5 лет назад

      Yep,, lots of kick ass vintage decks around for a few bucks on eBay... get them back working and ya have a nice setup on the cheap... most of the reddit crowd seem to be overcompensating for something;)

  • @chronosmusics
    @chronosmusics 5 лет назад +143

    VWestlife DESTROYS audio geeks with FACTS and LOGIC

    • @deletedaccount966
      @deletedaccount966 5 лет назад +15

      Also known as audiofools

    • @SSJfraz
      @SSJfraz 5 лет назад +8

      No he hasn't. It really depends on the equipment. The more powerful the speakers, the bigger the issue it's going to create. You wouldn't put your turntables on the same surface as PA speakers for example, that would just be stupid.

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад +2

      @@SSJfraz Well, they sort of do with Technics SL-1200's in clubs. But they DO use cartridges especially designed for such an environment running a high tracking weight...

    • @SSJfraz
      @SSJfraz 5 лет назад +6

      @@erwindewit4073 I've never witnessed a turntable DJ having their PA speakers on the same surface as the turntables themselves. Either the PA system is the clubs own system and usually mounted to the walls, or the DJ sets up his own PA system, with the speakers either on the ground, or on their own independent stands. Having a higher tracking force isn't going to make much difference at those levels. The resonance generated at these volumes is far too great to have the speakers on the same surface as the turntables.

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад +5

      @@SSJfraz You're right of course. The PA is very close. Close enough to cause serious vibrations on the platform the turntables are on. I used to be a DJ for a good while, and I was regularly surprised the turntables tracked at all! Let alone track without skipping.. Ever... But tracking force was usually set to 6-6,5 grams on Ortofon Concorde DJ cartridges. My Nagaoka MP-110 and vintage turntable wouldn't stand a chance. They probably would even play at all in an environment like that... Even with the speakers 'isolated' from the ground, the air pressure they produce, and the vibrations too are impressive :)

  • @StevenS757
    @StevenS757 5 лет назад +122

    It should be noted that this video is accurate for the majority of music, the majority of entry-level turntables, and the majority of entry level speaker setups. If you have a high-end turntable with a very light tracking Force, and you have very large speakers with high bass response, and you listen to Hip Hop or other bass-heavy music at max volume, then it's probably pretty likely that your record will skip like crazy or you'll have some feedback issues.

    • @jsdhesmith2011
      @jsdhesmith2011 5 лет назад +7

      DabneyCollins Yep, I have a P-mount cartridge with lighter than normal tracking force and with the addition of my HSU powered sub. I had to position my turntable on a separate table at least 8 feet away from my sub in order to keep the feedback from happening, and even then I took it a little bit further and created custom feet to eliminate as much contact space from the base to the table. Now I don’t have an issue. You can also get a noticeable hum that feeds through the power amp to the turntable if the components are too close. My turntable now sits on its own table like a spoiled brat but that’s what it takes to keep her happy. Btw, I like my music loud and clear!

    • @simontay4851
      @simontay4851 5 лет назад +2

      My dad has his turntable on a steel shelf thats mounted to the solid brick wall of the house with 8 screws. No matter how loud the bass is, it doesn't vibrate or feed back at all. Maybe you should mount your turntable on a shelf on the wall.

    • @martinda7446
      @martinda7446 5 лет назад +5

      Most 'hi end' turntables have a suspended sub-chassis, their suspension is generally tuned to below 5Hz so they are very difficult to excite through structure borne vibration from the speakers. Direct radiation will have some slight impact, Keep the lid closed. What makes them skip really bad - esp. if not damped - I mean bounce like a kangaroo - is if you have suspended wooden floors - as they also seem to be resonant at about 4 or 5Hz and many expensive tables will be bouncing uncontrollably when you walk over to change the record...Hence why they recommend a wall mounting shelf. EDIT: And then you could in all likelihood stick a big speaker next to it without any issue.
      Solid plinth turntables rely on the material properties, mass and damping to minimise feedback, but they never can quite approach the isolation offered by a suspended deck - doesn't mean they don't sound as good, they often do. Lightweight plastic plinth models should be avoided - if you can, they are prone to sing along with the music as demonstrated here - inadvertently maybe. There are many other performance aspects too, that cheap plastic turntables don't do well.There are many solid old turntables about for less money.
      Modifying old turntables to perform well is good fun, cheap and you can get the performance of a crazy priced chromed loony turntable for maybe 200 pounds. You just have to know what the strengths and weaknesses are of your chosen model. There are many, many great, yet undiscovered models out there - Just don't tell anyone. Keep it secret.
      You don't have to be an audiofool to pursue quality reproduction, or worse tragically avoid the whole thing for fear of being labelled a fool. You can be scientific about it, and sensible and be a music lover who experiences amazing things made possible by the combined effort of many extraordinary engineers who devoted their time to improve the quality of reproduction. Some of the greatest engineers who ever lived made it possible. Alan Blumlein and Howard Armstrong both early pioneers and considered the finest minds of their time. Many great engineers have been involved since, making the industry what it is.Too many people to list, too many products of note to list.
      There were no fools in this list.
      Sticking a plastic turntable on top of a guitar amplifier and getting it to howlround, then pronouncing that the stylus (which can measure less than 0.1 micron and at other times accelerate to over 6000G) is unaffected as long as it isn't sitting on top of the speaker as if- by some magic - the energy is removed from the system - Is well in the realm of audiofool.

    • @juslitor
      @juslitor 5 лет назад

      Any decent record player from the early 80´s playing through a proper amp/speakers set will produce low frequency feedback on high volume levels.

    • @martinda7446
      @martinda7446 5 лет назад

      @@juslitor A well isolated turntable with a suspended subchassis tuned to below the audio band will be almost immune,
      Even some transistors and ICs are sensitive to acoustic/vibration. Some early types especially. You could tap the case of an AC128 and drum along. Plastic cased transistors are less likely to be microphonic, but some are.
      Valves of course can be, and some can be bad enough to feedback and howl-around. It's worth testing valves for microphonics in sensitive areas, a quick tap with a finger nail will tell you. Swapping a first stage noisy valve for a final stage less noisy one is a quick and free improvement - if you have a few of the same type.

  • @rivards1
    @rivards1 5 лет назад +47

    I know arguing with audiophools is pointless but there is one test that would have officially killed the myth. Split the output and record it into Audacity with and without the speakers also thumping away. Then compare the recordings graphic profile and see if they look different.

    • @pmr1wrt53
      @pmr1wrt53 5 лет назад +4

      Instead of Audacity you can also try Wavosaur 32/64-bit (Free) for the recordings. It has Analysis features and 3D graphical screens.Oh Yeah... Everybody have good 2019 and don't blow you're ears up with the firecrackers... LOL

    • @xaenon
      @xaenon 5 лет назад +16

      Even better: Remove the drive belt from the turntable so the platter will not turn on its own. Put a record on the platter, place the stylus on the record. Pipe the output of the turntable into Audacity or something. Using a separate signal source like an MP3 player, play music through the speakers. Anything the stylus picks up will show up in Audacity without the record's music masking anything.
      There will probably be something, but it will likely be very, very slight.
      This was a criticism leveled at console stereos long ago - having the big speakers and powerful amps of the more lavish consoles in the same cabinet as the record player was seen by audiophiles as a mortal sin. Of course, we're talking about a breed of people who would argue over the merit of aluminum screws versus stainless steel screws holding the cartridge, and who look down their nose at anything that doesn't cost at least as much as a Buick.

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад +3

      Cool, make a video of that. Sounds great to try that! Please do that, preferably with setups that these audiophools may run. I'd be very interested in seeing the results.Arguing about results without testing (as you just suggested) is equally phoolish, don't you think?

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад +2

      @Lassi Kinnunen Well, I think it would matter to a bigger percentage of them than you may think. Point is: I don't think anyone has ever really done something like that... Just like Bob and Kim, it's nice to suggest to try that, but unless you do, your just making assumptions, just like the audiophiles. I like VWestlife for actually trying them out :) Rega turntables don't deal with vibrations very well, and something like the sort of affordable Nagaoka MP-110 (160 euros), which is really an audiophile grade cartridge (although many will say it's too cheap to be one). So doing the VWestlife tests, putting them side to side in Audacity would be a very good and pretty scientific way of testing that. It's obviously going to make one group unhappy (the side that was debunked), but hey. And you know in advance that either side that gets debunked is going to complain that it wasn't done properly, etcetera. Let's be honest, reading the reactions to this video, if it turns out the audiophiles WERE right after all, what do you think people here would say? I am a scientist (university, computer science and a separate grade in educational science), and I'd just be very interested in the results :) Oh, don't do the tests on the marble surface like Obama uses :)

    • @rzeka
      @rzeka 5 лет назад +2

      If you can manage to perfectly line up both recordings, you can invert the phase of one, and if it's pretty much silent then there's not much of a difference between them.

  • @user-vn7ce5ig1z
    @user-vn7ce5ig1z 5 лет назад +58

    It's so refreshing (and far too rare) to see someone not blindly accept whatever vague crap random strangers blurt out on the Internet and actually try to learn and understand the reasoning for it and do some tests to find the truth.
    My only regret is that I have but one sub to give.

  • @Kevintjesoem
    @Kevintjesoem 5 лет назад +1

    I really enjoy your video's and your clear view on audio. happy new year from The Netherlands!

  • @oliverlotus
    @oliverlotus 5 лет назад

    Love your turntable videos.... Keep em coming!

  • @retronartz1268
    @retronartz1268 5 лет назад +26

    My setup used to skip when I played hip hop records, and had both on the same surface. Putting them on the floor immediately made it not skip

  • @thelonelytimbit
    @thelonelytimbit 5 лет назад +12

    My living room hifi has speakers in the same cabinet as the turntable, and it does cause problems but not for the turntable itself. What happens in my experience is that if there is too much bass (especially if I turn on the subwoofer next to the cabinet) the speakers start oscillating pretty hard with inaudible back and forth movement. Whether the oscillation actually hurts the speakers or not I don’t know but I’m not willing to test it.
    Edit: my setup also has a low pass filter specifically to prevent this kind of feedback so even with preventative things like that in place it isn’t fool proof.

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад

      @@timotheatae That's quite improbable, 1 Hz. You'll need a pretty impressive sub to get to 15 Hz :) But they sure exist. I once heard very deep loud bass at the grocery store and decided to see where it came from. Well, that was 800 meters away, produced by a big hybrid sub playing the score of Jurassic Park :) COOL!

    • @thelonelytimbit
      @thelonelytimbit 5 лет назад

      @Timothy Honiss The sub isn't specifically for the turntable, it's for the digital music we play. And while the subwoofer doesn't help with oscillation it still happens with it turned off. I don't think the problem is anything to do with components (NAD C558 with brand new Ortofon cartridge and Paradigm Prestige bookshelf speakers) it's just down to the flaws of the format and the design of the cabinet they're in.

    • @rabarebra
      @rabarebra Год назад

      @@thelonelytimbit A speaker / sub shouldn't physically move. I have a sub myself going from 19Hz and up. It never physically moves. Then there is something seriously wrong with your speaker.

  • @BessieBopOrBach
    @BessieBopOrBach 5 лет назад +1

    A wonderfully entertaining video on which to end the year. Cheers to you, vwestlife. You bring the common sense and the fun, and I always dig your work. Happy new year!

  • @TheComputerGuy96
    @TheComputerGuy96 5 лет назад +6

    Thanks for introducing us to Jeremy Heiden's album Blue Wicked. I saw it on your videos about DCC, but here the songs sounded much more interesting, so I checked out the rest of the album. The music is fantastic, and it's cool how he sells this album in such a variety of formats!

  • @rzeka
    @rzeka 5 лет назад +11

    lol, these people will find any little detail to criticize you for. Even if they have to make one up

  • @HBC101TVStudios
    @HBC101TVStudios 5 лет назад +49

    Vinyl snobs do nothing but shoehorning people to have the most "perfect" audio experience, when most beginners just don't perceive the differences between various speaker arrangements and room acoustics.
    Alas, the "vinyl experts" on Reddit is cancer. Hence why Record-o-logy urges us to avoid them. Period.

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад +2

      Unless you have real hearing problems, you'll hear the difference. Weather you can, or want to afford it is another question. But you're right, people running digital playback equipment are very different ;) Vinyl snobs don't give a crap about what you run, it's you who does...

    • @deletedaccount966
      @deletedaccount966 5 лет назад +1

      HBC 101
      Check out the Reddit post on r/vinyl dealing with this video.
      "It's only a 100 dollar turntable" snobs

    • @erwindewit4073
      @erwindewit4073 5 лет назад +1

      Louis Oh bleh, I hate those. There will always be people... I do agree that the AT LP-60 and similar ones like it are probably a better choice, sound wise. Funny thing, as VWestlife already showed. What do people think? That everybody has all the money in the world? Sorry.. Got a bit aggravated..

    • @HBC101TVStudios
      @HBC101TVStudios 5 лет назад

      @@erwindewit4073 Yeah man, i agree with you. Not everyone is wealthy enough to own everything pristine and grand in this world, and "audio snobs" often think the opposite, which is rather illogical.

  • @DeepPastry
    @DeepPastry 5 лет назад +10

    I like how the "could" and "may" of the past decades have become "will mess with the player".

  • @Blacklight8001
    @Blacklight8001 5 лет назад +7

    I've only ever experienced feedback on a turntable. That was at silly high volumes though. No needle jumping with the speakers on the same table though.

  • @wavecast64
    @wavecast64 5 лет назад +6

    I love this and the video you did on the tracking weight of those crosley tone arms. Audiophiles are more concerned with gate keeping their community than enjoying music it seems

  • @mowganashwey
    @mowganashwey 3 года назад

    I needed this video 😅

  • @CaiusRo
    @CaiusRo 5 лет назад +6

    The part where you put the turntable on the speaker was hilarious!😂 I have my speakers right next to the turntable and never had a problem. Many years many setups. Keep up the good work and bust those myths! 👍🏼People really do say anything their mind makes up 🤥

  • @leonthesleepy
    @leonthesleepy Год назад +1

    update, on some speakers with the bass turned up, the lp120x can def get some nasty feedback on high volumes. but with the dust cover on, its mostly a non issue

  • @ct1660
    @ct1660 5 лет назад +18

    Well, this might not be much of an issue for turntables that track above 2 grams, but can be reason for concern if you have a very light tracking cartridge. One of my setups is an Acoustic Research turntable with a Shure M91ED cartridge tracking at 0.86g, and if there is too much bass when the speakers are at the same surface as the turntable, it does cause the stylus to skip. My Collaro, on the other hand, is unaffected, tracking at 2 grams.
    I think the main factor here is dampening. This is why there is no definite yes/no answer.

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife  5 лет назад +9

      Try setting the Shure closer to its maximum recommended tracking force of 1.5 grams. Then it probably won't skip. Remember, when it comes to tracking force ranges, the engineers determine the maximum rating, because they actually know what works best for it, while the company's marketing department determines the minimum rating, because they know that people have been led to believe that a lighter tracking force is always better.

    • @ct1660
      @ct1660 5 лет назад +3

      VWestlife at the same time, most "audiophile-grade" turntables seem to rely on the turntable feet to dampen unwanted vibrations. My AR turntable, much like my record changers, uses a spring-based suspension for dampening and isolating the chassis from unwanted resonance from the plinth.
      When properly set up and dampened, having the speakers on the same surface as the turntable shouldn't cause any issues.

  • @olik136
    @olik136 5 лет назад +5

    I think he invented a new instrument there- the elephant trunk base machine

  • @connorp1316
    @connorp1316 5 лет назад +18

    To be fair, putting speakers and turntables on the same surface can cause various problems with resonance. The main issue is the speakers causing the surface they are on, and by extension, the turntable, to vibrate. This may not be an issue if you have a sturdy table and small speakers, but it may cause huge problems with feedback, especially with sustained low notes or a large speaker. I’m not discrediting vwestlife, but I would like to see a test with larger bookshelf speakers on a flimsier table.

    • @Onneff69
      @Onneff69 5 лет назад +1

      @jackthegamer That whole turntable is a joke.

    • @PUPGRLPDX
      @PUPGRLPDX 5 лет назад

      Mala's boiler room had that issue.

    • @Stoney3K
      @Stoney3K 5 лет назад

      And the problem is easy enough to fix with a bunch of "audiophile quality" felt coasters.

  • @EddieJazzFan
    @EddieJazzFan 5 лет назад +2

    I have those same exact RCA/Radio Shack speakers. They sound surprisingly good.

  • @mercurialmagictrees
    @mercurialmagictrees 5 лет назад

    this was quite interesting, thanks for posting

  • @GreatBowlsAfire
    @GreatBowlsAfire 5 лет назад +1

    more amazing every time.. friggin love this place man

  • @Livewire91
    @Livewire91 5 лет назад +5

    Yup heard and read about this so many times. I have my speakers on the same surface and i really don't hear any flaws in the music when playing. The speakers usually have pads or small rubber pads/feet. Also the turntables have rubber feet and are mostly built really well so you would need big speakers with a really loud bass close to the turntable to have any effect on the turntable. You just need a stable and a decent surface for your turntable and the speakers.
    I have the klipsch R-15PM and R-14PM speakers and i mostly listen on pretty high volumes. They are on ikea tables along with my turntables and i have not noticed any problems during the playback of the music. As long as i don't notice any problems during playback i won't move the speakers further away.
    Imagine that the vibration has to travel all the way from the speaker to the cartridge/tonearm. Through the speakers shell,pads,surface/table,turntable feet, turntables construction all the way to the tonearm/cartridge. This is just my personal experience with these two speaker pairs and my turntables currently in use. Teac TN-100, Teac LP-R550.

  • @NothingLikeVinyl
    @NothingLikeVinyl 5 лет назад +1

    Last weekend I went to a friend's house to setup his brand-new AT-LP120-USB turntable, which he put in the middle of a wood shelf that has two compartments on its sides custom-made to fit his home stereo's speakers. It is impossible to turn the volume up while playing a record without getting low frequency hum in crescendo.

  • @kcrose8607
    @kcrose8607 5 лет назад +3

    I picked up a Sony PS-LX250H on your recommendation (an amazingly simple and good quality beginners turntable btw), and its on the same surface as the speakers. Haven't had an issue yet, these things have pretty good rubber feet. Thanks for reminding me to get a copy of Blue Wicked though, but i want the MiniDisc :)

  • @compu85
    @compu85 5 лет назад +2

    It would be interesting to compare a line out recording from the turntable with the guitar amp next to it, and with it not. I suspect there might be some small differences in the waveform, but they’d be slight. And probably inaudible on non-headphones.

  • @KC4RAE
    @KC4RAE 5 лет назад +3

    Way back when I was still playing records, I got low frequency feedback but I really cranked it pretty loud. We had two 12" speakers on a carpeted floor.
    Criticisms from some are are meritless and you just proved that again. Surprised no one has egged your car yet. :)

  • @Fluteboy
    @Fluteboy 5 лет назад +7

    I can remember years ago on the radio, when the presenter put on Runaround Sue, took off his headphones and turned the studio monitors up to enjoy the song, not realising he was creating the lowest pitched feedback. Combine this with the compression used in broadcasting, and the result was horrendous.

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife  5 лет назад +2

      Probably he accidentally left his microphone on.

  • @RadOo
    @RadOo 5 лет назад +1

    Eeh, okay, let's say I haven't looked on forum like this yet and propably I can be happy 😂, what did you do is video explanation on topic that propably no one has tried yet? I haven't seen simular video like this one yet. Great idea to do that. I would like to see another one 😁

  • @onetwothree4917
    @onetwothree4917 5 лет назад +2

    Happy New Year for 2019 VWestlife. All the best.

  • @vladsee76
    @vladsee76 5 лет назад

    In my previous audio setup a few years ago, I experienced a loud hum when I positioned my subwoofer around 1 or 2 feet away from the turntable. The cartridge must have picked up the vibration from the sub. When I repositioned the sub a bit farther away, the hum was gone and it was playing regularly again. In my current setup position, the turntable is a few inches away from the center speaker as well as the right floorstanding speaker while the sub is 4 or 5 feet away. I have not experienced any problem from that position at all.

  • @RemiDupont
    @RemiDupont 5 лет назад +6

    Thank’s for inducing some common-sense to some viewers.
    Like always, great video

  • @apatia29
    @apatia29 5 лет назад +2

    I don't know why I always end up looking for the albums you use for your experiments.

  • @ttheone3518
    @ttheone3518 5 лет назад +2

    Very useful video

  • @kylehungerford7746
    @kylehungerford7746 5 лет назад +1

    Do you have this record on your other channel? It's wonderful.

  • @dougd1115
    @dougd1115 5 лет назад

    Years ago I had a pair of 8" 3-ways and one of them was right next to the turntable. And it caused what I would describe as muffling of the sound. When I moved the speaker away from the turntable the problem went away. I guess for the most part it depends on what you are using. Great videos!!

  • @electrojones
    @electrojones 5 лет назад +1

    Another great video.

  • @gnupfo
    @gnupfo 5 лет назад +2

    As a control group I'd suggest setting the speakers on a different surface and testing if there's any hearable difference between speakers on the same vs. on a different surface. Otherwise, nice and factual video with throughout testing!

  • @chandlerseanspears9404
    @chandlerseanspears9404 5 лет назад +2

    Your videos are amazing , thank you for debunking the elitest snobbery around vinyl

  • @TheChinatownkid
    @TheChinatownkid 5 лет назад +1

    Great video.

  • @OX71
    @OX71 5 лет назад +1

    my old zenith console used to cause skip, but that was with the shutters closed and the volume almost maxed.

  • @lineartechbd1600
    @lineartechbd1600 5 лет назад

    I used to have a setup that included a marantz receiver, a pair of cerwin vega u123 speakers and an sl1500 turntable where I would play some loud music with a lot of bass and it would knock the tone arm around and make it skip.

  • @BedfordLevelExperiment
    @BedfordLevelExperiment 5 лет назад +2

    It'd be interesting to see what would happen if you put a splitter on the line out from the record player into both your PC sound card and your speakers. Record a song on your PC from the record player with the speakers off, then record it again with the speakers on loud, and then take a close visual compare of the waveforms between the two. Maybe even do a digital compare/diff between the two, but of course the speed will vary slightly between the two playbacks so that alone probably wouldn't be enough.

  • @ArthurJS123
    @ArthurJS123 5 лет назад +2

    By the way, your videos are fantastic.

  • @theoblivious2001
    @theoblivious2001 5 лет назад +2

    That is a good album-just finished listening to it.

  • @BrixTalk
    @BrixTalk 5 лет назад

    hi, I guess it would be nice to have a direct comparison between same surface and other surface. I heard a slight whisper in the first test, but I don't know if this was caused by the speakers and noch something else.

  • @jamesveach6918
    @jamesveach6918 5 лет назад +3

    I have my JVC turntable with good rubber feet on top of my realistic receiver and my speakers are Polk audio and they are on each side of my stereo and I cannot turn my stereo up because when I do my record skips because of the bass I turn my bass down and it still skips so I have to play my stereo at a very very low volume when I play records

    • @umajunkcollector
      @umajunkcollector 5 лет назад

      Get a BSR TT with 7 gram ceramic cartridge. Patch that into a Juliette 8 track / radio combo amp, problem solved, crank it full blast through its five inch speakers. (freq response = 100-2000hz at best)

  • @TheSoundrookie
    @TheSoundrookie 5 лет назад +1

    Actually there's more to this problem, than placing the speakers on the same surface. Infact placing the speakers on the same surface doesn't have much (if anything at all) to do with it. If you experience a resonance or feedback problem, the cause is always the turntable. Some turntables are very sensitive, while others are not. If you had used another turntable you could have gotten a completely different result, but it would be because the turntable catch the vibrations out of the air, not because the speakers was on the same surface. If you have a sensitive turntable, you can get feedback, though the turntable is placed on a separate shelve, meters away from the speakers.
    The problem can be caused by the plinth having a frequency of it's own in the low frequency area which pick up resonances. It can also be caused by a thin (full size) plastic plinth picking up everything (especially combined with low stylus weight). The tonearm can have the same problem. If the platter is small and the record therefore is hanging freely, the record itselves can pick up vibrations. Even the shell on some cartridges can have this issue, and the list continues. All logic tells us that resonance and vibrations will be a factor no matter what, but it's always some weakness on the turntables that makes it audible.
    The problem with resonance, and feedback has existed as long as the existence of turntables, but in the good old days when they made real hifi equipment, the bigger amplifiers had subsonic filters which pretty much solved the problem, if you had a sensitive turntable. Being that vinyl is back, they really should consider fitting modern amps with subsonic filters.
    So though you could have gotten another result with another turntable, you are absolutely right; The myth is busted. The problem do exist, but it's not caused by placing the speakers on the same surface. Infact some turntables can be placed on the floor right in front of large floorspeakers turned to max, and you won't experience any problems at all (For instance a Philips 777 can do that, believe it or not).
    Happy New Year mate.

  • @TheHitmanAgent
    @TheHitmanAgent 2 года назад

    Can somebody tell me what turntable is that at 0:43 ?

  • @tomc0240
    @tomc0240 5 лет назад +1

    Yep, when your speakers bass drivers are approximately 4 inches in diameter it is indeed very unlikely the bass response will alter the turntable playback

  • @jefferyjones8399
    @jefferyjones8399 5 лет назад

    It did cause a lot of reverberation when I had my speakers on the same table as my turntable. Usually this occurred when I left the lid open.

  • @jdekong3945
    @jdekong3945 5 лет назад +2

    Depending on factors, I have experienced feedback/howling from turntables through speakers so although most setups wont experience any issues as demonstrated by Kevin, it can happen. If you don't have problems then don't worry about it, but the advice given by manufacturers to distance the player & speakers & avoiding the same shelf etc, is not baseless.

  • @classicgamereviews54
    @classicgamereviews54 5 лет назад +3

    Yeah i was catching hell in r/vinyl for having my turntable, receiver, and speakers on the same surface around christmas time.

  • @andrewthepanda95
    @andrewthepanda95 5 лет назад

    Is it normal to be able to hear music playing from the stylus on a record player? I just got an audio Technica lp60 record player and I started to play a record and I noticed a weird high-pitched sound coming from somewhere near the record player. I couldn't tell if it was just coming from a speaker or if it was coming from the record player. So I muted the stereo system I have it plugged into and I got down close to the record player. I could hear the music coming from the stylus its self. It sounded very tiny but I could hear it. If you could tell me if this is normal that would be cool thanks.

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife  5 лет назад

      Yes, there will always be some "needle talk".

    • @andrewthepanda95
      @andrewthepanda95 5 лет назад

      @@vwestlife well this is some serious needle talk cuz I can hear it very obviously like it's not even hard to hear it's very easy to hear especially if there isn't any music playing. do you think I created a stylus eventually would make that get a little quieter or would it have to be upgrading a cartridge which would be an impossible on this turntable.?

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife  5 лет назад

      You can try replacing the stylus.

  • @God-yb2cg
    @God-yb2cg 2 года назад +1

    "Vinyl" and "high-end" in the same sentence is an oxymoron.
    Vinyl is fun and so are cassettes and other mediums, but for critical listening nothing compares to digital in the first place.

  • @Thievius333
    @Thievius333 Год назад

    I was always under the impression that the vibration from the speakers would cause the tonearm to skip, not specifically the stylus. But I'm man enough to admit that I was wrong. Mostly though, I always avoided having the speakers that close together because I wanted a wider soundstage.

  • @alexandervp7922
    @alexandervp7922 5 лет назад

    Well i have a soundbar for my turntable, the subwoofer is on the floor and the soundbar is in front of the turntable, will this still be bad? Sorry i am new i don’t know, can someone tell me please?

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife  5 лет назад

      No, as long as you haven't heard any problems with it, then it's fine.

  • @beitie
    @beitie 5 лет назад

    I think this style of set up is fine for good budget systems and such. I did own a really cheap Technics turntable in the early 2000's that picked up horrible feedback from my system (Pioneer SX-828, and Pioneer CS-G304a speakers). So I still would say it will vary on things like your EQ preferences and what is in your set up. Even my current set up can cause feedback issues (Pioneer PL-707, Pioneer Elite VSX-50, Paradigm Monitor 11's, and the feedback mostly comes from a Paradigm PW-2200 12" sub on the other side of the room). Love your vids, and have a great 2019.

  • @chicagochris1988
    @chicagochris1988 5 лет назад

    I've had issues with it with my technics, it's very sensitive. Just depends on how much bass the speakers are putting out really.

  • @davemichelsen
    @davemichelsen 5 лет назад +1

    The real reason to not put speakers near your turntable is because of possible acoustic feedback. Your turntable is actually a microphone in a way. In fact, if you put the stylus on a record with the motor stopped and talk or play an instrument near it, you'll here the sound come out your speaker. The record acts as the microphone diaphragm and the cartridge is its coil. Turntables are shock isolated for this reason but some are better isolated than others. This is why you can get away with putting speakers near a well isolated TT without feedback. And, if it sounds OK to you having them on the same surface, it's not doing any harm to the TT or cartridge or record. That's my professional opinion.

  • @luckybob77
    @luckybob77 5 лет назад +1

    Already have 35 audio-fools pissed off, way yo go man!

  • @giammyzanna
    @giammyzanna 5 лет назад

    I have a turntable that was once without its feet, so the plastic of the base was directly touching the hifi cabinet. The speakers are pretty much 1m apart from the cabinet but if I got the volume high enought I could hear the feedback altough not as loud as I can hear in the video: I could still hear the music but constantly with the feedback. Once I put dampened feet on the turntable I nevere heard the feedback again so I guess there are many factors to keep in mind for this sort of test

  • @goldenboy5500
    @goldenboy5500 5 лет назад

    my speakers sit on the floor and I get feedback if I turn it up too loud

  • @jorgeszabo1659
    @jorgeszabo1659 5 лет назад +7

    Time to stay away from audiophools for a few days...

    • @umajunkcollector
      @umajunkcollector 5 лет назад

      vinyl sounds "better than CDs" ?

    • @thaddeusmcgrath
      @thaddeusmcgrath 5 лет назад

      @@umajunkcollector i think it depends on the system and studio recording of the record or CD. I found CBS records and CD albums sound like crap compared to Warner Bros. media, but if I play a CBS record and compare it to a CD the CD sound is better on my end. I prefer vinyl for the sound but mp3 is more easier to store and no complaints because I no audiofool lol.

  • @m.zillch3841
    @m.zillch3841 5 лет назад

    The danger of acoustic feedback only applies to some scenarios and I demonstrate it here: ruclips.net/video/1rgK0YMsJXM/видео.html
    Before the onset of full level "howl" feedback there can also be a distortion from what is called "incipient acoustic feedback distortion" which can cause either a boominess or murkiness to the sound.

  • @handmakingtv
    @handmakingtv 5 лет назад

    Vwestlife... I have a serious question I can't find the answer to. Has anyone tested the tracking force to the Numark pt01 touring suitcase model turntable? I have been looking for years and I don't have the tools to measure myself.

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife  5 лет назад

      That's really the same thing as the Crosley Cruiser, which I did a detailed video about, including tracking force measurement: ruclips.net/video/06wBwVkw9xU/видео.html

  • @exiletomars
    @exiletomars 5 лет назад

    i wonder if you were digitizing a record if it would cause interference, raise the noise floor, etc?

  • @Gajodareactividade
    @Gajodareactividade 5 лет назад

    My right speaker, Wharfedale Diamond 220, is at about 10cm of the stylus, when in arm rest position. If I turn the volume up to a certain level, there will be feedback (low frequency).

  • @CamdenBloke
    @CamdenBloke 2 года назад

    Wow. When I built my Hi-Fi system in this past month I totally upgraded from the bookshelf speakers hours originally going to get to floor standing speakers because that was the only way, with my room setup, that I could have them not be on the same surface (actually, I could use stands but I decided that if I was going to do that anyway I might as well get floor standing speakers). I'm glad I did though, I was able to get more separation and have the sound fill more of the room.

  • @RMelancholy
    @RMelancholy 5 лет назад

    Hey - I have a SANYO TP XI. It has a good cartridge, stylus, and it spins fine. Problem is that I can’t get sound. I plugged the RCA jack to an amplifier- no dice. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
    Cheers

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife  5 лет назад

      Are you using a pre-amp? That turntable does not have one built-in, so you'll need either an external pre-amp or an amplifier or receiver with a magnetic phono input.

    • @RMelancholy
      @RMelancholy 5 лет назад

      VWestlife Hi and thx. I’m running it through a KENWOOD stereo digital graphic equalizer GE-722. I recall years ago running a similarly older turntable through the DBS/LD input jacks and it worked.

  • @brwi1
    @brwi1 5 лет назад +1

    Most turntables I’ve had, you can hear through the speakers when i Iightly tap my finger against the case. It doesn’t seem too far fetched that some bass heavy tracks could resonate to the stylus in some setups.

  • @lauracorbett4577
    @lauracorbett4577 5 лет назад +3

    I'm saving my money for an audio technica LP60 Bluetooth record player when I get paid

  • @roscat_
    @roscat_ 5 лет назад

    I used to have an LP60 and had it sitting on this small table with the speakers next to it and sometimes, especially with a hip hop album, I would get a rumble sound from the stylus.
    I suspect it was happening also because the little table it was on was not very heavy.
    I later put that same set up on a bigger, heavier table and never had that issue.

  • @garyjagels7662
    @garyjagels7662 2 года назад +1

    Maybe the 4 pads on the base of the turntable insulate it enough from the resonate frequences that would have caused problems if they weren't there.

  • @ot4kon
    @ot4kon 5 лет назад

    it caused a problem with floor standing speaker touching a cassette deck with the sides of the speakers and the turntable was on top of that deck, the problem was solved when I separated them leaving a half centimeter of distance between of them.

  • @leonthesleepy
    @leonthesleepy 2 года назад +2

    I've literally tried testing this at ear wateringly loud volumes with my Edifier R2000DB speakers.
    Placed both speakers just 2 fingers away from the turntable, and tried blasting the music to see if there would be a difference. I did this on the most entry level turntable you can get, the LP60X. The results?
    No difference lol. I used bass heavy records, music soundtracks, and your general pop records. Not a damn difference. Now of course, do i keep my speakers THAT close all the time? Of course not. But even in that worse case scenario, i dont hear a difference or notice any sort of distortion. For reference, i also listened to those records with headphones. So no, there really isn't any perceivable difference. Now of course, i'm sure some audiophile will tell me that i'm wrong and they can hear some sub frequency, but the bottom line is this.
    If there is a difference, its so goddamn miniscule that you dont need to worry about it. Just dont let the speakers actually TOUCH the turntable, and you are good to go.

  • @matthorakova2677
    @matthorakova2677 5 лет назад +1

    All of my speakers are sitting on folded towels, even my wife was like WTF are you doing? I said I'm muffling the vibrations. I dunno, I just always have done that with bookshelf speakers.

  • @djijspeakerguy4628
    @djijspeakerguy4628 4 года назад

    Try this with a subwoofer. I think it is possible to some extent to have enough vibration to cause some of this feedback. I had this issue with a Paradigm subwoofer I had fixed and was testing for a customer. I played a record on an LP60 and it caused a slight low rumble to get picked up by the stylus, but the subwoofer was on a tile counter (with wood under the tiles) right next to the turntable. It is still so hard to cause this that I am not sure why any audiophile would ever even mention it.

  • @dahoo-needledrop
    @dahoo-needledrop 5 лет назад

    It all depends on how resonant the table surface is and damping ability of the turntable feet. I used to do vinyl ripping with technics sl1500 while watching a film with explosions, I can clearly hear rumble feedbacks at times later while listening to my needledrops with headphones. I can also feel vibrations on the table. So later I have to use foam to damp my speakers. Moreover, With the dust cover closed, it may make the resonance worse. Technics sl1200 on the other hand, it is less affected due to better damping feet. So one experiment does not mean there is no negative effect in all cases.

  • @alpzepta
    @alpzepta 3 года назад

    I don’t have a lot of room so I used the vibration dampener mat on my table and even then my Sony speaker don’t vibrate much and it’s doesn’t affect the sound of my turntable

  • @Fluteboy
    @Fluteboy 5 лет назад +1

    8:07 - That felt SO good! It's like: "Yeah! Smoke that you audiophile w*nkers! I'm gonna misbehave!"

  • @johannkrist
    @johannkrist 5 лет назад

    I have had a huge feedback problem with my system with floorstanding Dali 505 speakers next to Ikea Kallax shelf holding my recordcollection and turntable, My Teac TN-200 and this setup would not work together, I solved the problem somewhat with another speakers standing on spikes, This Audio Technica model/Aiwa is probably more resistant to vibration than my Teac-Tn200. I have now replaced my Teac with a Rega and I can play my music very loud and have no problems.

  • @PretentiousBrownie
    @PretentiousBrownie 5 лет назад +1

    On the Bose, the OEM PSU would be silent, you are correct. But on the topic of the video, I think we all know that enough vibration can affect the sound - from skipping to slight wavering or whatever, but the likelihood that it would be an issue in general listening is slim, and most turntables are isolated enough to dissipate any minute vibrations that could actually impact sound.
    In reality, it’s mostly large vibrations, like someone running by or shifting the player while it’s active that’ll give you issues. Ideally, anything to minimize vibration is nice, but sometimes the effects of those audiophile “tips” are so negligible that it’s just pointless.

  • @michaelbahnsen2888
    @michaelbahnsen2888 4 года назад

    Never had an issue with my speakers being on the same surface as my turntable. Back in the day we sat the turntable on top of the receiver. I am old school and we are talking way back in the mid seventies.

  • @davekazoroski6548
    @davekazoroski6548 5 лет назад +3

    Interesting - SA155 is 1.8 WPC, yet can produce damaging sound levels. Proves you don't need big power for big sound.
    Back on point - most good turntables have vibration isolation built in. And if the surface the equipment is on is reasonably stable - no worries.

    • @MK-si7kq
      @MK-si7kq 5 лет назад

      The cartridge and tone arm do not have vibration "isolation built in", and that is where all of the physics of vinyl play back happen.

  • @ffmfg
    @ffmfg 5 лет назад

    I wouldn't call this "busted" as this testing only applies to a limited set of equipment and conditions. Here's my little story about speaker/turntable relationship. When I was a kid in the 80s, my father was a diy/hifi enthusiast. He made big floor-standing speakers, amp, and custom turntable. It was setup in one room, with a turntable pretty far away from the speakers. With some music, vibrations from the speakers would propagate through the floor to the furniture the turntable was setup on, and cause t/t to skip despite the anti-vibration suspension. People mentioned in the comments that the effects might be higher for setups with low tracking force, so that might be the reason in my case. Anyway, after some time my father moved the turntable to another room, and that completely fixed all the issues.

  • @Helvetica_Scenario
    @Helvetica_Scenario 5 лет назад

    VWestlife, Have you ever done a video on replacing the AT-LP 120 anti skate spring? I'm ordering one, but don't really have experience taking these apart.

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife  5 лет назад

      No, but this web page has the instructions I followed: imgur.com/a/J4tdA

  • @patthewoodboy
    @patthewoodboy 5 лет назад

    best sound from my turntable .. it was in another room with the amps .. and the speaker cables in the "disco" .. it was a party in my flat :-)

  • @ElectroPotato
    @ElectroPotato 5 лет назад

    Once we organized a party with friends where a DJ only played vinyl. 2 speakers were on the floor and above a certain volume the turntables picked up that feedback.