Sure it is not.or maybe some internal computer switching issue
Most likely: defective preamp board for both units. You should contact your retailer ASAP.
Sure it is not.or maybe some internal computer switching issue
Thanks, ya, I googled it too- found nothing! - Yes, it has a 5-yr warranty however I just hate sending 'polished' electronics to some guy just to be thrown around a bench somewhere. Lol, I am kinda OCD about scratches, etc... ... But I guess it's gotta be done. I never use the tone controls because I am a Dirac room correction user, but still there is the resale value to consider.Interesting that you have two with this issue, a quick google doesn't show it up anywhere else. Maybe contact your local distributor. Still under warranty?
Thinking the same thing, thanks.Sure it is not.
Most likely: defective preamp board for both units. You should contact your retailer ASAP.
Thinking the same thing, thanks.
107dB SNR is still inaudibly quiet. Better won't sound any quieter.From a user standpoint, the idea of supporting phono demands at the minimum a subsonic filter and a mono switch. When I see high priced gear that is supposed to support phono playback without those, I know that the thinking behind the product is not complete.
To it's credit it does feature a balance control and tone controls. So it is halfway there.
I thought current thinking was to use a mono cartridge for mono playback, not a mono switch - and to keep records flat rather than use a filter.From a user standpoint, the idea of supporting phono demands at the minimum a subsonic filter and a mono switch. When I see high priced gear that is supposed to support phono playback without those, I know that the thinking behind the product is not complete.
To it's credit it does feature a balance control and tone controls. So it is halfway there.
Late to the game here, but I actually just purchased a used Model 30 and I am having the exact same issue as you with the 'Tone/Balance' being enabled only producing sound out of one speaker. Were you able to get this fixed? I was hoping a hard reset would solve the issue, but that doesn't even seem to be an option. I can't complain too much, as a I got a really good deal on this unit (wondering if this is the reason) and when the 'Tone/Balance' is disabled it sounds fantastic--it just bugs me that I can't even attempt to mess around with the Treble and Bass knobs.
Here I was thinking that I was going crazy.
That's the tube based EQ configuration that needs to warm up.I need to turn the Model 30 on, leaving 'Tone/Balance' enabled for a little while, and then it kicks in properly. It's almost as if the feature needs a proper warm up period.
I thought current thinking was to use a mono cartridge for mono playback, not a mono switch - and to keep records flat rather than use a filter.
Because if you use an awkward format, it has to be even more so these days, I guess?
Serious question: What about screwing up the grooves of ancient mono 78 records with an incorrectly dimensioned stylus?I have mono cartridges, yet prefer a preamp switch. One of the problems with phono reproduction is balance. Cartridges rarely have spot on L to R balance, so the 'center image' can drift given relative phono cartridge levels. A mono switch equalizes the channels, so that is less of a problem. Really, with monophonic, the best way is to just listen to one loudspeaker, but no one wants to do that.
The thing with a sub filter is to keep record related LF garbage from entering the amplifier, and then (possibly) causing loudspeaker woofers to start pumping, in their attempts at reproducing the LF garbage. With digits, it's not a problem.
Serious question: What about screwing up the grooves of ancient mono 78 records with an incorrectly dimensioned stylus?
I have some 78's from my grandmother that date back to my fathers born year of 1927 (& newer) and some historical "Gullah" language one's that I would like to digitize. Hopefully I will be able to start my digitizing project by the second quarter next year.That's an altogether different equation. The best way to listen to 78 rpm records is either digitized (from someone elses effort), or with a Victrola (steel needle) reproducer. I have some 45 rpm EPs that were originally released as 78s, but have no real-time experience with 78 rpm, which I don't collect, and that predates my interest in hi-fi. I do have a wind up 78 rpm Thorens machine, but have not used it in years. I'm afraid it would break if I wound it up.
Back in the day, most record players offered 78 rpm (and some with 16 rpm, for voice recordings). US cartridge makers offered styli to accommodate 78 rpm records, if needed. In Japan, Denon offered the DL-102 in both mono Microgroove and 78 rpm versions. But price to the consumer was commensurate with the rotational speed of the record.
Grado offers a 78 rpm stylus. I have no recent hands-on experience with Grado cartridges. For anyone interested, the Rek O Kut Website lists 78rpm styli/cartridges.