Many picture discs do sound good.
Do picture vinyl sound worse.
What this mainly leads to is increased surface noise which is most obviously heard in the silence between tracks.
Black vinyl can sound cleaner than colored but remember that a lot of 70s black vinyl djm elton albums and some of those early factory joy division lps and singles for instance only looked black.
There s very little compression so the loudest parts of those sounds often.
Only white should sound worse.
Do they sound worse to you.
Very few additives can be mixed into clear vinyl without jeopardizing the opacity which means there is a potential for worse sound quality albeit this drop is often imperceptible to the common listener.
Most picture discs do sound pretty horrible but they don t have to.
With picture disc vinyl a vinyl base is laid down then a full size label is placed on top and then a clear wax layer on top that the plates will then be pressed into.
Other vinyl colored or clear can be dead quiet.
The white substance used to due the record can cause random pops rumor has it that it is a kind of chalk.
That you would use for a standard record or will it damage the picture artwork.
Vinyl s capable of a lot but only if the grooves are wide enough for the needle to.
They didn t include the graphite if that s what it was that made it.
Does the picture on the disc itself ever deteriorate.
The expensive machines designed to de magnetize records before play are de magnetizing the carbon used to make vinyl black.
A few exceptions exist.
One recent example is the picture disc release of liam gallagher s as you were cut by barry grint from alchemy.
How are you supposed to clean picture discs.
Can you use all of the same cleaning fluids etc.
Vinyl can still push music to the limits of its dynamic range 55 70db but it often shies away from doing so in order to maintain sound quality.
There s basically nothing you can do to make an hour long album on one record sound good gonsalves said.
Clear vinyl picture discs and glow in the dark pressings are more susceptible to poor playback.
That s why snare drums cymbal splashes and other loud instruments have so much more punch in vinyl recordings.