Turntable Essentials?


Hi!
I'm putting together my to buy list which offers great psychological comfort until I sum up the final costs. Anyway, in the record playing catagorie is an Acoustic Solid Solid Machine turntable, an Ortofon tonearm; most likely the RS212D, an Ortofon SPU Mono GM MKII cartridge, an excellent record clamp but there are so many to choose from, maybe as a second; the stock Acoustic Solid Solid Machine tone arm, the Ortofon Mono Cadenza cartridge on the AS and stacks of RCA Red Seal Victor, Columbia Masterworks and Archive mono LP's from the early 1940's to the late 1950's and a few jazz LP's from the !950's and 1960's. The phono stage is an ASR Mini Basis. Any suggestions? What else?
goofyfoot
I'm putting together my to buy list which offers great psychological comfort until I sum up the final costs.
What in the world does this mean? Just curious.
There is a condition according to the American Medical Association which can be cited in their publication of the Psychiatric Dictionary called Extroversion. Extroversion is a psychological phenominon that occurs in the minds of some people whenever they are shopping or window shopping for merchandise. The sensation is similar to the affects of eating chocolate however sometimes the down side is that a person with Extroversion will spend money that they ought to be saving for something else.
Get the Fremer Turntable setup DVD. Get a digital VTF gauge for 79 from Music Direct. Setup is everything. Good brush and cleaner is essential--I am using the spin clean now which is a good low cost entry for someone with a few records. The magic eraser is a great stylus cleaner for sure. And then put your efforts into finding the best vinyl you can. Enjoy!
My collection has collected a great deal of dust which a good static brush should resolve. However, it seems as though more emphasis is put on cleaning than I had expected. My collection is in remarkable condition given that these records are about 60 years old. Many of them look as if they've never been played, all the more reason to take good care of them.
Record cleaning machine. A 60 year old clean to the eye record can have mold growing in the grooves.
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Brf is exactly right, the grooves of your 60-70 y.o. records are caked with all sorts of historical grunge. You need to make a plan as to the best way to clean them before you get to enjoy them. Playing them as is, even though they may appear clean to the eye, will certainly degrade the records and probably damage your cartridge. They are not making 70 year old recordes anymore so treat them kindly.