Skip to main content

Notice

Please note that most of the software linked on this forum is likely to be safe to use. If you are unsure, feel free to ask in the relevant topics, or send a private message to an administrator or moderator. To help curb the problems of false positives, or in the event that you do find actual malware, you can contribute through the article linked here.
Topic: Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation (Read 21239 times) previous topic - next topic
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation


                            [/li][/list]
                   
                   
                   
                                                                                                                                                Gorillaz - Dare
                            From Demon Days. 190 gram vinyl (weighed record personally).
                                       
            [a href="http://www.knowzy.com/Computers/Audio/Digitize_Your_LPs/Samples/Gorillaz-Dare_%28CD%29.flac" target="_blank"]                            Play CD Sample (FLAC) 
[/b]
                                       
                                                       
                                                       
                                                                          Pros:
                                                                         
  •                     Fully digital master transferred to analog vinyl.
  •                     Low, intricate bass that may be difficult to reproduce on vinyl.
  •                     Light-to-moderate compression that's presumably not present on vinyl version.
                                            Cons:
                                                       
  • Nothing comes to mind. Please chime in if you have reasons why this is a poor sample to use.
                 
                                                                                             
                   
                   
                                      The Black Eyed Peas - Dum Diddly
                            From Monkey Business. 140 gram vinyl (weighed record personally). Edit: Now using a different section of the track
                                       
                                        Play CD Sample (FLAC)
                                       
                                                                                 
                                                         
                                                                            Pros:
                                   
  • Another all digital master
  • Low, jaggedy (from a waveform  standpoint) bass note that should be difficult to reproduce on vinyl  (last second of clip)
  •                                         Moderate compression
                                                            Cons:
                                                         
  • This was my original choice for a digitally mastered recording.  However, the LP weighs in at 140 grams. I worry that the inferior vinyl  will shift the blame of poor reproduction from the turntable to the vinyl. If you think this would make a  better sample than Dare and are not as concerned about the vinyl quality, please  chime in. Edit: Now using both this clip and Dare.
                   
               
               
               
                                                                                                                                                Fleetwood Mac - Rhiannon
                            From Fleetwood Mac. Scratched and Dusty Album.
                                       
                                        Play CD Sample (FLAC) 
                                       
               
                                                       
                                                                          Pros:
                                                                         
  • Abused, scratched and dusty LP.
                                            Cons:
                                                       
  • Nothing comes to mind. Please chime in if you have reasons why this is a poor sample to use.
                 
                                                                                             
                               
                   
                   
                                                                            The Process:
                           
                   
                   
  •                                               Brand new 180 gram, virgin vinyl for DSOM and Aja. 190 gram and 140  gram vinyl for Demon Days and Monkey Business  respectively with no pledge of virginity.
  •                                                 Brand new turntables. The only playback prior to recording will be the level-setting.
  •                                                 Record from best turntable to worst, thereby keeping record wear minimal. The best-to-worst order looks like this:
    • Audio-Technica: "Dual Magnet" AT3600L MM cart, aluminum platter, lists specs
    • Ion Audio: MM cart, plastic platter, no specs
    •                                               Crosley: Ceramic cart, plastic platter, no specs
  • Set levels in the same track but at different point from sample. Make best effort to match the amplitude of CD rip. In the case of compressed  digital rips, analog recording should approach peak without clipping. Edit: Or don't set levels at all if USB turntable doesn't allow it.
  • Computer        : Three year old, home built PC Pentium / Via MB. Only USB mouse, PS/2  keyboard, DVI out and 100-baseT will be connected during recording. Edit: Forgot to mention headphones.

                           
                                Any other samples?
                               
                   
                   
  •                                               Useful to take a silent sample form the beginning and/or end of an album?
  • Silent sample of turntable without power connected to test for problems similar to this guy?

                           
                            Two out of three turntables have already arrived. I'm expecting the Crosley today. Sample clips will follow soon after I gather feedback on the process and clips.
                   
                    This should be fun!

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #1
Record weight is an almost entirely meaningless indicator of sound quality, and in many cases a heavier weight implies poorer sound quality. 140g is fine.

You might want to try analog recording the SACD DSOTM, unless you can find an earlier CD master. That CD layer on the SACD has some massive issues, as Stereophile pointed out a few years ago.

You probably should have asked us first for CD/LP comparison advice  Off the top of my head I can suggest a few LPs that I absolutely know for certain have (virtually) the same master as the CD. You can't be at all sure of that with these records.

Recordings of each turntable both without any music playing (but with the motor running), and in a blank groove, are extremely useful.

If you could, please measure the tracking force of each cartridge with a scale accurate to 0.1g or so. You don't need to get one of the hifi scales.

The measurements we're looking for are:
  • Equalization errors due to cartridge/amp distortions - shows up as frequency response deviations in vinyl vs CD
  • Tonearm resonance - causes unnatural bass boost if it's too high. shows up as large peak in frequency response of vinyl vs CD. This also implies a stiff suspension which if paired with a high tracking force can really screw up a record.
  • Tracing distortion/scanning loss - nonlinear distortion due to stylus shape. Shows up as continuously rising HF response of vinyl vs CD, might peak if the needle is too big
  • Noise margin of amp - how far below the groove noise is the amp noise? Shows up as response difference in amp noise recording (motor running, stylus not in groove) vs groove noise w/o music
  • Noise rejection of cartridge - How well the stylus profile is able to track the groove in the presence of groove scratches/dust/etc. Some cartridges are better than others on this. Shows up as a difference in noise levels of the same groove noise between two cartridges, once the peak sound levels of each recording are equalized.
I have an old pressing of Aja and the original US and 30th anniv pressings of DSOTM recorded with my 440ML, but alas I just broke the tip on my OC9, so I might be of marginal help with comparing against a higher end system. However, I do have a Stanton 500 at my disposal.... 

This is all about investigating the situation from an audiophile perspective, of course

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #2
I'm not familiar with any of these turntables so i'm not sure what adjustment they may/may not have. However, I would suggest setting them up properly - esp. cartridge alignment and tracking weight/anti-skate - before doing anything else. To this end you will need a test record if you don't already have one. A test record would also have a blank groove that Axon suggests you record too. And some test signals like white and pink noise and pure sine waves that could also be useful in assessing the frequency response of individul cartridges. Using a test signal may be better than comparison with CD in any case as you can never be sure that the CD and LP are from the same master unless you are privy to inside information about the mastering. The test record HFN001 also has tracks for measuring cartridge/arm resonance in the vertical and lateral modes though I'm not sure if it's still available

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #3
140g is fine.

In that case, I'll probably stick with the Black Eyed Peas clip. More compression and that challenging "jaggedy" waveform.

You might want to try analog recording the SACD DSOTM, unless you can find an earlier CD master.

I own at least one and possibly two other versions of DSOTM. I'll report back with when I get home tonight. Thanks for pointing out the CD layer issues on the hybrid SACD, I had no idea.

Recordings of each turntable both without any music playing (but with the motor running), and in a blank groove, are extremely useful.

Will do.

Measure the tracking force of each cartridge with a scale accurate to 0.1g or so.

That was part of my plan all along. I picked up model 55 shown here.

Noise rejection of cartridge - How well the stylus profile is able to track the groove in the presence of groove scratches/dust/etc.

I have a few LPs in bad shape. I can sample those once I'm done with the brand new albums.


I have an old pressing of Aja and the original US and 30th anniv pressings of DSOTM recorded with my 440ML, but alas I just broke the tip on my OC9, so I might be of marginal help with comparing against a higher end system. However, I do have a Stanton 500 at my disposal....

I would love to compare the low-end turntable samples to something much better. If you're willing, please bring 'em on!


I'm not familiar with any of these turntables so i'm not sure what adjustment they may/may not have.

Chart #3, Turntable Construction shows each USB turntable's adjustments. In the case of these three, none have anti-skate adjustment, nor an adjustable counterbalance. None of the cartridges are user-replaceable.

So, I don't think there's anything thing to adjust here. When I get my hands on a Debut or a DJ USB turntable, we'll talk!

Using a test signal may be better than comparison with CD...

I'm happy to get some test record samples, though I need help in picking a good one and some good samples from it.

"The Ultimate Analogue Test LP" looks like a winner with tracks like "Wow and Flutter Test Signal" and "Anti-Skating Test." I also found several others at Needle Doctor.

My main concern is how many plays I can get out of these before having to buy a new one at $40 to $50 a piece. I expect the Crosley to track around 6 grams and who knows how badly the anti-skate is preset.

At what point should I expect record wear become problematic for objective sampling?

Thanks for your feedback so far. I can't wait to crack these boxes open and get started. But I want to get all my ducks in a line first.

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #4
It looks like my other Dark Side disc is the 20th Anniversary edition. It fits this description exactly. I will recreate the sample tomorrow.

On the test LP front, I've narrowed my choices to "The Ultimate Analogue Test LP" and the "Hi-Fi News Analogue Test LP" (HFN002). Both seem to have tests I don't want to miss.

On Ultimate, missing on HFN:
  • Wow & Flutter test. I consider this very valuable. I assume you can apply a formula to arrive at the WRMS value based on how often the sample deviates from 3150kHz.
On HFN, missing on Ultimate:
  • Three identical anti-skate test tracks at the beginning, middle and end of the album
  • Full frequency range sweep - 20Hz to 20kHz.
  • "Torture track:" 300Hz tone at +18dB

Tough choice. I'd appreciate some feedback. Heck, I may just get both!

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #5
My main concern is how many plays I can get out of these before having to buy a new one at $40 to $50 a piece. I expect the Crosley to track around 6 grams and who knows how badly the anti-skate is preset.

At what point should I expect record wear become problematic for objective sampling?

Mistracking will do more damage than tracking weight per se. In other words if a cartridge is tracking perfectly it won't do much harm even if the tracking weight is quite high. A cartridge that is mistracking will do damage even if it is tracking at a much lower weight. So, if you start out with the least challenging test and only go on the the next test if if a that test is passed you shouldn't have any problems with wear (I'm still using HFS75, which as the number suggests, was manufactured in 1975). I would be very surprised if any of the decks you're testing come anywhere near the +18dB test or the +16dB one. It'll be interesting to find out though.

Re the wow & flutter test track, I think you may need specialist equipment to produce a result

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #6
So, if you start out with the least challenging test and only go on the the next test if if a that test is passed you shouldn't have any problems with wear (I'm still using HFS75, which as the number suggests, was manufactured in 1975). I would be very surprised if any of the decks you're testing come anywhere near the +18dB test or the +16dB one. It'll be interesting to find out though.
BTW, if anybody is interested, there is a f*ck ton of test records on eBay now. STR101 for $2!

Quote
Re the wow & flutter test track, I think you may need specialist equipment to produce a result
Actually I wrote a demodulation app in LabVIEW that I've been raring to play around with. If Knowzy posts the FLACs I will try to post some numbers within some reasonable length of time (but I can't commit to a firm deadline).

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #7
It looks like my other Dark Side disc is the 20th Anniversary edition. It fits this description exactly. I will recreate the sample tomorrow.

On the test LP front, I've narrowed my choices to "The Ultimate Analogue Test LP" and the "Hi-Fi News Analogue Test LP" (HFN002). Both seem to have tests I don't want to miss.

On Ultimate, missing on HFN:
  • Wow & Flutter test. I consider this very valuable. I assume you can apply a formula to arrive at the WRMS value based on how often the sample deviates from 3150kHz.
On HFN, missing on Ultimate:
  • Three identical anti-skate test tracks at the beginning, middle and end of the album
  • Full frequency range sweep - 20Hz to 20kHz.
  • "Torture track:" 300Hz tone at +18dB

Tough choice. I'd appreciate some feedback. Heck, I may just get both!


The antiskate tones across the disc on HFNRR are not that useful, the +18db track is suspected to have been distorted on the cut itself, and I really don't trust the sweeps on my HFNRR all that much. Get Ultimate.

Nobody's sure AFAIK how much damage occurs to a record (especially a test record) after a single play with a ceramic. What you can do is do an ABA test with a known-decent table vs the Crosley vs the known-decent table, with a record you care least about, and I can compare the frequency response before/after the Crosley is played. If there's a significant difference then you might want to run the test record on the Crosley last.

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #8
Mistracking will do more damage than tracking weight per se.

That's my understanding.

The tracking force is more or less known for the Crosley- it uses a "vintage" cart. I'll get the exact measurement after I get the samples.

The unknown is how well (or poorly) the anti-skate compensation is set. I guess the test record will show us that soon enough...

 
Re the wow & flutter test track, I think you may need specialist equipment to produce a result.

Actually I wrote a demodulation app in LabVIEW that I've been raring to  play around with. If Knowzy posts the FLACs I will try to post some  numbers within some reasonable length of time (but I can't commit to a  firm deadline).

That would be great if we could get some measurements from this test. I certainly plan on posting all the samples I create. This whole exercise would rather unfulfilling if I didn't! 

And please, call me Jeff. Knowzy's the magazine.

Even without WRMS or JIS figures, there's surely a good chart to come from this sample. Maybe a narrow-range frequency analysis where you can see the line straying from 3150Hz over time.

I don't see anything like this in Audacity. Maybe Wave Repair can create such a graph?

Get Ultimate (Analogue Test LP).

I ordered both but I expect to rely on Ultimate for the most part.

The last thing on HFNRR that I really like is the full 20Hz to 20kHz sweep. Utlimate breaks this up into two different tracks and they go in opposite directions- one goes high to low and the other goes low to high.

Again, I'm thinking chart value here: A single sweep through the audible frequency range revealing both frequency response and RIAA-equalization compliance.

Nobody's sure AFAIK how much damage occurs to a record (especially a test record) after a single play with a ceramic.

I think that says it all: I'm not sure people will trust further measurements after a possibly mistracking ceramic cartridge is dragged over the test record. We can certainly do some testing with it nonetheless.

...you might want to run the test record on the Crosley last.

Yep. I'm planning creating the samples starting with best turntable and ending with the worst (see "The Process" in the original post).


The test LPs should arrive next Monday or Tuesday. I expect sampling to commence shortly thereafter. Thanks for your input so far.

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #9
Even without WRMS or JIS figures, there's surely a good chart to come from this sample. Maybe a narrow-range frequency analysis where you can see the line straying from 3150Hz over time.

I don't see anything like this in Audacity. Maybe Wave Repair can create such a graph?

I did some investigation and perhaps answered my own question. What I'm looking for is a time-frequency view of the sample's spectrum.

Both Audacity and Wave Repair feature spectrum views of the waveform. However, I found that neither are very good at zooming in on a small range of frequencies.

Enter Spectogram, a free Windows utility specializing in spectrum analysis. With it, I can zoom in on a frequency range as small as 500Hz.

Using Audacity, I created a 10-second sine wave sample at 3150Hz and ran it through Spectogram. Here's what it looks like (click to zoom in):



3150Hz sine wave over 10 seconds

The red line in the middle is exactly 3150Hz.

Of course, the real wow & flutter test tone will not look nearly as clean when played through a turntable. I expect the blue shades (representing lower dB noises) to be all over the place in a real sample.

However, I'm hoping to see that red line move around in relation to effects of wow & flutter on the tone.

Does anyone think this will work the way I'm expecting?

For comparison, here's the first ten seconds of the DSOTM sample in the same frequency range (broken into two panes because it's stereo):



"On the Run" between 2,900Hz and 3,400Hz


Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #10

Everything has arrived.

I expect to start posting FLACs this weekend.

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #11
You're fully bought in   

Sounds like Spectogram can do most of what you want, and if I wind up buggering out of this project it will give you good charts, but I'm hoping to do things with demodulation that the spectrogram could never do. For instance, with a demodulator, I can filter out frequency deviations at/below 0.55hz which are often due to off center pressings and are therefore rather impertinent to the measurements.

Spectrogram software with offline analysis and finer control can do things like wide windows, high dynamic range windows etc which might deliver cleaner graphs.

I do not have the software set up (yet) to do weighted wow/flutter measurements, though.

Samples from USB Turntables: Preparation

Reply #12
After the abusing them with ceramic cartridges, I promised I'd buy a new set of records to sample with for round two. That's when reality hit me- companies are only pressing one batch of these albums. Once they sell out, that's it.

I caught the last remaining Black Eyed Peas LPs from an obscure seller called ShockHound. But I was too late for Gorillaz, which is too bad because it was a really challenging LP.

So I went in search of an LP that can do what Gorillaz did to those cheap record players, namely:
  • Cause the Audio-Technica to clip
  • Cause the Grace to skip on every beat and the Crosley to skip occasionally

I'm happy to report that I found such an LP. It even caused the AT to skip in one place.

Introducing the replacement track for Gorillaz's Dare:


Michael Franti & Spearhead - A Little Bit of Riddim

Play CD Sample (Flac)

[a href="http://www.knowzy.com/Computers/Audio/Digitize_Your_LPs/Samples/Michael_Franti_And_Spearhead-A_Little_Bit_Of_Riddim_(CD).flac" target="_blank"]