The paragraph of product ifo claims it does not digitize the recording, so this could prove to be very interesting, as it does NOT use a stylus to touch the record.
Preserve your record while listening to pure analog sound… Got $15,000?
The paragraph of product ifo claims it does not digitize the recording, so this could prove to be very interesting, as it does NOT use a stylus to touch the record.
Preserve your record while listening to pure analog sound… Got $15,000?
Nice.
Well honneslty my Stanton ST150´s were cheaper lol.
I mean.. it is cool, and it preserves records, as nothing touches it.... but $15k?
You could buy a car for that much lol
Ha.
15K is chump change for audio.
I have personally witnessed someone coming into an audio store with a suitcase of money to buy speakers. I really do not want to say how much it was because it really is none of my business, but suffice it to say that it was more than my house.
I never even thought such a thing was possible outside of movies.
Thats really neat! Now I need a way to keep my ATRAC's from dying :P
I think lasers would destroy the tape of the 8-track carts XD
could you not fucking have a laser measuring device that can pickup the distance of the audio channels in the record fo much much much couple hundred bucks?
the output of the distance data would create a waveform for the audio, it dont seem that fucking rocket surgery ////
Spiffy. Bit pricey tho. I could see myself get a cheaper version of this at some point if it becomes available.
But you can feel it. It has been a source of much confusion within the bass music community for a long time why Vinyls seem to have a deeper low end than digital files that should contain the exact same information. People try to use voodoo terms such as "warmth" to try to describe the phenomena, but only really a 40k+ PA will reveal what they are talking about. If the digital file shakes the house, the vinyl version will shake loose your kidneys. And what turns this into a complete mindfuck is the fact that the majority of us uses digital equipment to make the tunes. So there shouldn't be any extra information anywhere that could somehow get lost along the way into either format. My crew have settled on "the vinyl houses have better mastering engineers" because its the only thing that makes sense, but I can tell that none of them are genuinely convinced and they're all secretly thinking that its because of magic...and reasons.