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Some Turntables Questions!
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amit
what does it mean to have a digital output? Does it mean that you have a clearer sound?

Why is my cd player loader than my turntables? it seems much loader which i hate the most! and i heard its true with all tables then how do djs spin at clubs which such low headphone volume? Cause a cd player has a higher volume on your headphones then turntables. If you can answer these then that would be great! thanks amit!
Widget
A digital connection, means that thesound is transferred digitally, rather than analoge. In sort, digital sound is less prone to noise, static, glitches & is considered to be "cleaner". In a way "clearer" too. Some people say that digital sound is also of a higher quality & that you can hear the difference.

When you use the word "loader", do you mean "louder" as in a higher output level?

- A.
amit
yeh higher in output level and in your headphones!!!!
Teal'k
digitally = coaxial or optical..
sound is then converted to 1 and 0's.. (like cd sortoff).. digitally transferred sound hasnt got ANY loss at all cuz, a 1 send is a 1 received.. analogue sound is with sinusoids.. and cables can add background noise.. so ur sound get distorted a little bit.. And if u put ur volume high.. that distortion also gets amplified and that s up the sound.. Digital doesnt have that effect..

About that cd-played + turntable stuff..
A turntable: the needle falls into small holes in the vinyl, which makes a little 'sound' (simply said), this sound is 'recorded' by the element (the head)... and is then transmitted to the output port.. for example.. if u take a turntable, give it power, put vinyl on it, play it (without connection to an amplifier) u can also hear the vinyl (softly volume though)..
a cd player works via laser, which (digitally) reads the small holes into the lower layer of the cd.. which creates a 1 or a 0.. a d-a (digital - analogue) converter converts it into what we call 'sound'.. that sound is already amplified by then..

so the difference is that a cd-player always has an higher output volume.. cuz that one is always being amplified.. and a turntable is not..

thats why on a simple amplifier u have 2 kinds of input ports for them:
phono - for turntable (phone is being PRE-amplified)...
aux - for cd players (this is not being PRE-amplified..)

after that PRE-amplified thing comes ur volume control.. and then ur output to ur boxes....

try to put ur cd player to phono input, put volume control to ZERO.. and start ur cd.. then slightly take ur volume higher.. u'll see, its VERY VERY VERY loud, and gets distorted soon, cuz its being pre-amplified.. and that is not necessairy for cd-players..
amit
thanks dude man! for real if it wasnt for you man! then i would be spinning at lower volumes! man now i can fianlly feel the bass! and i can finallly tell the diffference from cd and vinyl! thank god for this forum! thanks for ansewr my question ddudd!
Teal'k
roger.. that'll be $5 ROFL j/k
:)
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