I had an AR turntable for about 10 years. Never a problem. Various Shure cartridges.AT one point my system was an AR turntable, Advent receiver, Shure M91ED.
What if the moon had a nose??what if he exchanged the cheap turntable with a rega planar 3 .... that will be so unfair.
Hahahaha, didn’t get the irony of your first message - tried to be ironical my self. In one YouTube video about this comparison one guy wrote something like „ Well with only $ 500,000 the AR will be hard to beat. The comparison is totally unfair for the $ 500.000 Turntable“. He was right!78€ is 0.0156% of 500K,
900 is more than order of magnitude more at 0.18%… this may put the more expensive tt in a disadvantage.
If the moon had a nose, is an interesting question. if we keep the gravity lock, not much will change. But if a bumpy (nosy) moon rotates can influence the needle and the SQ. So we have to be more careful with measurements, maybe doing them at constant times… I’m not a cosmologist, so can not truly explain what will happen if the moon had a nose, but this is just the amateur’s try.
It doesn't work with we or swiss transfer ?!I don’t think so.
Yes, I was thinking of exactly this 1902 movie! It caused great ontological uncertainty in my tortured soul when I saw it....
it seemed less saturated on A so I voted for it.
Well, later in the thread Fremer shows up and claims the recordings were actually made from two different records. https://www.avsforum.com/posts/61482504/
So I am not sure this test proves anything. I thought I heard a difference in the tambourine sound, it seemed less saturated on A so I voted for it. But if it's two different masterings of the song, that would tend to overwhelm the difference in the equipment.
Honestly, if they used the same record I'd at least entertain the idea the test was valid, even with different recording gear, but nothing was the same except for the song selection. If I learned anything from this test, it's just which version of the album I would buy.I noticed that mistake too, and besides that, the whole recording chain was different.
All outside factors should be eliminated and only the test objects which are the two turntables should change, so a test like this must be done at the same place with the same recording gear.
The lesson for me is intelligence tops money.Honestly, if they used the same record I'd at least entertain the idea the test was valid, even with different recording gear, but nothing was the same except for the song selection. If I learned anything from this test, it's just which version of the album I would buy.
Maybe the real lesson of this test is that sound quality depends more on the record than anything else. Something we don't really control, and so like to avoid thinking about...
I think this explains the difference in klicks I heard on the TechDAS Air Force Zero.Well, later in the thread Fremer shows up and claims the recordings were actually made from two different records. https://www.avsforum.com/posts/61482504/
Yep.So I am not sure this test proves anything. I thought I heard a difference in the tambourine sound, it seemed less saturated on A so I voted for it. But if it's two different masterings of the song, that would tend to overwhelm the difference in the equipment.