1940s Record Pressing Factory, Vinyl

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  • Опубликовано: 4 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 15

  • @CoolDudeClem
    @CoolDudeClem 5 лет назад +4

    Almost exactly the same as how modern records are made!

    • @robfriedrich2822
      @robfriedrich2822 5 лет назад

      But one different, modern records were nonbreakable. I can't understand, that they pack it so careless.

  • @brildidge9523
    @brildidge9523 4 года назад +2

    These records are not VINYL ( vinyl is a strong flexible plastic which does not break easily ). These are SHELLAC records - as mentioned in the actual video. A few - very few - 78 rpm records were produced in vinyl in the late 1950s when shellac was being phased out in favour of 45 rpm vinyl discs, but that is not what we're looking at here and generally, 78s from their beginning to the end were shellac.

  • @Fiendstein
    @Fiendstein 6 лет назад +2

    Immortal Music Written in METAL! \m/

  • @paulbucknall1064
    @paulbucknall1064 6 лет назад +1

    Interestingly the process hasn't changed much from shellac to vinyl. Apart from the composition of the disc and of course using solid gold before the first coating process!

    • @robfriedrich2822
      @robfriedrich2822 5 лет назад

      In the USA it was in the 1940's not unusual, to play records via radio. So they could change the plastic, mix some vinyl under the plastic and some kiddie records were vinyl. This made it possible to change to something like the LP.

  • @EHM5513
    @EHM5513 4 года назад

    I'm looking for a song that my father used to listen to but I don't remember its name and it just had a video where they made records, the song said the word happy and the band was a family I think ...I remember it was like this.
    "Love Is in be well, I love be can't for you "
    If someone knows please tell me

  • @gpuppy1234
    @gpuppy1234 8 лет назад +2

    Geez that's a lot of baths

  • @joelrose8514
    @joelrose8514 6 лет назад +1

    Compare the price of getting a record made then and now.

  • @hyzercreek
    @hyzercreek 5 лет назад

    OK the record has grooves, the stamper has ridges, the mother has grooves, the master has ridges, and the wax has grooves? Does that make sense. And the other side of the master has grooves too? Did I get that right?

  • @PrankZabba
    @PrankZabba 2 года назад

    This video is just loaded with so many wrong things that it should trigger any collector. Just look at how many people are just grabbing the record in this video. Sure they may clean it at the factory over and over, but look what happens during final packaging. They are just grabbing it again. Reminds me of when I used to see people try to move wet paint.

  • @Morbuto
    @Morbuto 6 лет назад

    Evidently shellac records, not vinyl...

    • @hyzercreek
      @hyzercreek 5 лет назад

      I don't know man. Looking at 12:34 it looks like one of those early RCA vinyl machines. I never saw a machine that flips shellac records around like that. I had a shellac 78 juke box and you put the record in and it stays there, the turntable comes straight up and the needle moves over. No machine for shellac records would just drop them like in this video, it has to be vinyl.

    • @ghsgtnayhmd4792
      @ghsgtnayhmd4792 4 года назад

      "1940s" vinyl microgroove LPs weren't invented until the late late 40s

  • @brizeeuk
    @brizeeuk 7 лет назад

    what a palava