Buying Records


I always buy new sealed LP records unless new is not available. I only shop eBay. When buying a used record I buy near mint, nothing lower graded. I never seen used mint. I have had good luck with near mint. Most make no noise at all. A few have had a second of very light noise and I am ok with that. I noticed on the very light noise it about disappears if I track VMN95ML at 2.5 grams. It is normally a 2 gram tracking. So tracking on the heavy side may be of benefit.

jimbennet

I only buy near mint on eBay and done well. But eBay is not as good as a professional record retailer.

I buy on Amazon, and from Rhino and the various audiophile labels and distributors. I don't buy used vinyl. 

I have said these things before.  We who play records have a lot in common with members of the flat earth society.  On the other hand, every time I cue up something on Qobuz it feels like a kiss on the telephone.  Mark Twain quipped, difference is what makes horse races.  It is a good time to be alive.

The Internet has been a real boon for me. I buy records from all over the world, mostly older pressings, obscure jazz, protometal -rock/heavy psych, I collide with the "collector" market in some cases. I’ve slowed way down. At peak, I had about 17k LPs, winnowed that down to around 5.5k or so when I moved to Texas, probably bought a thousand more since I’ve been here, and gotten rid of another thousand. 

What I have is fairly curated-- a deep shelf of Vertigo Swirls, pretty substantial label collections of Island pink, Strata-East, some Nimbus West, a couple walls of "classic rock" including preferred pressings,  lots of classical from Decca, London/Decca, EMI ASD, some RCA Dogs and Mercury Living Presence, lots of old audiophile stuff I rarely listen to, but am reluctant to part with; I can "shop" my "stacks" and will occasionally buy a new record but am not chasing the 12th copy of some warhorse, have multiples of some records in the elusive chase for a better sounding copy. There have been preferred dealers over the years, from EIL in England to Ella in Japan, I found a guy selling dumpster finds of sealed Nathan Davis Segue pressings that were tossed when the studio went bankrupt. I used to attend the shows in NY and Austin, don’t much bother anymore. I maintain a few relationships with collectors. It has gotten to be an expensive hobby, it wasn’t always so. And grading is all over the place. It’s nice to encounter a vendor who grades conservatively. 

I learned a lot about cleaning and care when I dove deeply into it in around 2014. Bought a Monks Omni, had the Audio Desk, got a KL and eventually, got a good quality (Furutech branded Orb DF-2) record flattener, which has been a life saver.