missan wrote:Some months ago I did a DSC analysis of a piece from a Decca record.
I found the Glass Transition to be just below 70degC.
As vinyl is a amorphous thermoplastic I believe if this temp is reached there will be a plastic deformation of the vinyl that is permanent.
Following this thread I am totally convinced that the transition in the vinyl is taking place in a very thin layer and is of no importance regarding deformation. If there should be any resamblance with ice skating I believe that the temp above the record´s surface must be closer to Tg temp. The surface pressure when playing will not normally make the vinyl too stressed, it´s still well within the elastic area.
missan
Edit: better spelling
ld wrote: Accumulated groove wear perhaps involves progressive changes and erosion for these first few molecular layers, through glassing, leaching of plasticisers, fracturing of polymers, and mechanical surface interaction with the stylus.......?
Maaarten wrote:I have experience with ortofon DJ styli.
My nightclub E doesn't take some records well. Beats go like prr prr prrlike it has troubles with too hard recording, or having to read too many tones at one time. So the sound deforms.
on some records. For the rest it sounds more balanced, natural. Not screamy in the mids like the conical.
I prefer elliptical, but with conical you are safe. Every record will give an reasonable sound quality. The shape and a low cantilever mass and needle pressure can do a lot well on a conical stylus.
Thomas_A wrote:Many records are really playable except the end-of-side grooves, where the modulations get more narrow and distortion rises. Several say that a linear tracking arm is "the solution", but I am not totally convinced.
Thomas_A wrote:The sss-sounds (sibilance) gets more distorted, as I figure is in the critical 3-6 kHz region, which probably is due to:
(...)
Naturally, these two could be due to wear, most probably by the use of elliptical stylii, worn or not, the most common ones used back then. I have a typical such record which I am now investigating.
flavio81 wrote:Thomas_A wrote:Many records are really playable except the end-of-side grooves, where the modulations get more narrow and distortion rises. Several say that a linear tracking arm is "the solution", but I am not totally convinced.
I use a linear tracking turntable (SL-7) with an hyperelliptical stylus. There's no serious increase of distortion at the end-of-side grooves, except for records who were already damaged by another turntable.
But i think this is due to the stylus not due to the tangential tracking.Thomas_A wrote:The sss-sounds (sibilance) gets more distorted, as I figure is in the critical 3-6 kHz region, which probably is due to:
(...)
Naturally, these two could be due to wear, most probably by the use of elliptical stylii, worn or not, the most common ones used back then. I have a typical such record which I am now investigating.
A micro-ridge stylus will give much less sibilance (or no sibillance) than an elliptical on the very same record. I have heard two MP3 files comparing sibilance with a JICO SAS stylus versus an elliptical, and the difference is obvious.
Thomas_A wrote:Many records are really playable except the end-of-side grooves, where the modulations get more narrow and distortion rises. Several say that a linear tracking arm is "the solution", but I am not totally convinced.
Thomas_A wrote:The sss-sounds (sibilance) gets more distorted, as I figure is in the critical 3-6 kHz region, which probably is due to:
(...)
Naturally, these two could be due to wear, most probably by the use of elliptical stylii, worn or not, the most common ones used back then. I have a typical such record which I am now investigating.
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