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Vinyl Record Production Gets a Much-Needed Tech Upgrade (engadget.com)

Ever wondered why you sometimes have to wait months after an album's launch to get the music on vinyl? It's not necessarily because the label hates vinyl -- in many cases, it's because the decades-old manufacturing process can't keep up with the format's resurgence. From a report on Engadget: Relief may be in sight for turntable fans, though. Viryl Technologies is producing a pressing machine system, WarmTone, that should drag vinyl production into the modern era. Much of WarmTone's improvement rests in its use of modern engineering. It's more reliable when producing the "pucks" that become records, makes it easier to switch out stampers (the negatives that press records) and sports a trimming/stacking system that can better handle large-scale production. Also, there's a raft of sensors -- the machine checks everything from pressure to temperature to timing, so companies will immediately know if something goes wrong.

5 of 303 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Have they added DRM yet? by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This! I don't want vinyl, what I want is a digital download of the master used to produce the vinyl. The one that doesn't have to compete in the loudness wars and isn't compressed all to hell.

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    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
  2. Re:Have they added DRM yet? by bickerdyke · · Score: 3, Insightful

    while vinyl is an analog recording by nature.

    Which doesn't say anything about any similarity with the original signal.

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    bickerdyke
  3. Re:Oh for goodness sake by Jethro · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What you're saying pretty much proves my point, especially when you talk about vinyl as a "piece of art". specifically, as a piece of visual art. I'm talking about the music and sound quality. Yes, nice bit cover art is cool, but I'll take higher audio quality over that any time. The same way that I want a poster to look nice rather than sound nice when I unfurl it or feel good when I touch it.

    And saying vinyl produces a more accurate sound is, if you will forgive me, the exact opposite of true. The medium is by it's nature distorted. No digital sampling? Perhaps. But you have inaccurate analog modeling that gets degraded every single time you play it. Digital sampling is 100% accurate 100% of the time.

    And what do you say about albums that were produced using digital equipment to begin with? I've had people argue that Brothers In Arms by Dire Straits sounds better on vinyl because "That's how it was meant to be heard". That album was produced specifically to take advantage of the newly-available CD's capabilities. And that is not a recent album.

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    In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is kinky.
  4. Re: Have they added DRM yet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Further, is there really _no_ digital going on between recording and pressing in new works? I'd be pretty surprised if they are recording direct to vinyl master these days, or recording to analog tape, cutting the tape, and creating the vinyl master from it.

  5. Re: Have they added DRM yet? by ai4px · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Pop Singer? What is the sorcery you speak of? I thought they were /entertainers/. First and foremost, you have to been good looking, we can fix your voice. And if you aren't selling any songs, don't despair, "accidentally" release a sex tape.

    You know the number one reason Vinyl sounds better that digital? Because the music was better when they were making vinyl.