chebby said:If I had a vast collection of 45s then I would treat myself to a rebuilt Dansette ...
like this
(The guy is a legend hence the prices I suppose.)
His rebuild videos from a couple of years ago...
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=%27the%27+dansette+bermuda+-+the+solution!+part
(Yes, I watched all of them!)
MajorFubar said:Hi Freddie, if the records were cut with a mono cutting head, then probably yes. But that doesn't mean they won't play well with a stereo cartridge, especially if you can find some way of switching your amp to mono, or rigging-up an adapter-lead that mono's the input from the turntable.
Freddy58 said:Hello chums.
A dumb question I know, but do I need a mono stylus to play some of my old 45's? I've seen postings related to this, but I wasn't able to see anything definitive.
Cheers.
plastic penguin said:Oddly I've been playing some (bag over head time) Cliff Richard tracks earlier. His early mono stuff sounds the dogs in SQ terms.
MajorFubar said:plastic penguin said:Oddly I've been playing some (bag over head time) Cliff Richard tracks earlier. His early mono stuff sounds the dogs in SQ terms.
Quite often the mono mix still sounded better even if there was a stereo mix available. Some say it's because mono mixes were given the most love an attention back then, because stereo was a gimmick. But there's other reasons as well, such as the mono master used the same width (1/4 inch) and speed (15ips) of tape as the stereo master but had that one channel recorded over the complete width of the tape, whereas the stereo master divided it into three: two stereo channels and a very narrow guard-band to minimise cross-talk. On top of that, mono records themselves often sound better than stereo because the method used to encode two channels of audio in one record groove is a bit of a compromise.
plastic penguin said:Mono certainly gives an extra dimension (or different perhaps); the sound is more personable.
MajorFubar said:Some also say that mono only sounds at its best when played through one speaker. But I think that's probably a very subjective thing; I much prefer to hear it from two speakers placed in the conventional stereo equilateral-triangle layout.