



cocoabaroque wrote:Wow and flutter are two seperate issues-- wow is often primarily caused by off-center pressings or warps in the vinyl. Any turntable that has audible wow has serious problems, such as a damaged idler wheel or slipping belt, unstable electronic circuit, etc. Musicians tend to be more aware of wow as it can sound like a vibrato at 33.3 rpm-- very disturbing if it was not intended in the original recording.
Flutter is easiest to detect when compared to a lower-flutter table. Tones may sound or "feel" smoother or more solid on a lower flutter table. Idler decks typically use 1800rpm motors, and their fast rotational speed makes motor cogging (flutter) less audible. Slower 300rpm (Linn, Thorens, etc) motors on suspended-type tables have much higher audible flutter.
Whats really interesting is the flutter of the 300rpm motors make wow less audible. The micro-cogging makes the pitch of the notes less centered, and less susceptable to perceived wow. It's a pleasing effect when it masks the defects in the original recording. This, I believe-- is the draw to Linn, Thorens, even Rega. Most of your records sound great when the problems are masked.
With regard to the original post, I would think the defects are additive. Older records whose master was cut on an idler-drive lathe may have less flutter, while masters cut on later direct-drive lathes may have more flutter (or might mask the wow in your off-center pressing!)
duficity wrote:I would suspect that the combination of tape master wow, record off center wow and turntable drive mechanics wow is so random as to never conicide, and therefore the worst example of wow would be limited to which of those three sources has the worst deviation.
Trackside wrote:duficity wrote:I would suspect that the combination of tape master wow, record off center wow and turntable drive mechanics wow is so random as to never conicide, and therefore the worst example of wow would be limited to which of those three sources has the worst deviation.
Each of those sources of WOW will by cyclic and non random and thus it's a certainty that they will coincide in the way described.


cocoabaroque wrote:Further clarification of my earlier post: Play the same off-center pressing LP on 2 different decks-- a Thorens (or Linn), and an idler-drive Rek o kut or similar. You may not even notice the pitch fluctuations in the Thorens/Linn, it will sound basically fine-- or at least not too bad. You probably WILL hear the wow with the ROK. Both decks play the same LP with the same issue. Why is the wow less evident on the 300rpm motor tables? Because of the flutter. Incidently, nearly ALL LP's are pressed off center, but many are "close enough" considering the technology of vinyl playback at the time the record was released. As motor speed-stability improves with massive platters, flywheels and low-cogging motors, pitch variations (wow) will become more intrusive.

cocoabaroque wrote:Trackside: Yes, exactly-- although I do not agree with the definition "high frequency pitch oscillation". Flutter may be within the audio band too. Anyone who has seen their Grado cartridge "wiggle" in the groove can also hear flutter in the low frequency range with oscillations about 10-20hz. Presumably, a 300rpm motor may flutter at 300hz, or multiple thereof (1200 in a 4-pole motor). If the flutter or motor cogging is mild enough, such as with the low-torque but smoother running Rega motors, the flutter is less audible.
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