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Cool record edit pro notch filter
Cool record edit pro notch filter










  1. #Cool record edit pro notch filter how to
  2. #Cool record edit pro notch filter drivers

I’ll play around with that - otherwise I’ll learn to live with a sub crossover/volume combo that sits below the earthquake rumble reaction. It’s a different game when you get into the $10k+ realm. I’ve always had a nice stereo set up but never really nice stereo. I’ve always been into listening to music and sound quality but only up until recently (about a year) have I really discovered what a very good stereo sounds like. I absolutely love my set up (aside from the recent sub rumble issue) and am blown away by how good some recordings can sound. I understand that a properly set up REL should go unnoticed but apparently I Guess I like more bass than most “purist audiophiles”. Flit it to 0 while music is playing and the Sub rumbles uncontrollably.

#Cool record edit pro notch filter drivers

Then my system sounded awesome in the bass, you won’t believe it, I had sub bass unit’s <60hz (2 x Kef B1814 in 11cuft enclosures each) that were flat to 19hz!!!! Those bass drivers made the Kef B139 look like tweeters Then I could wack the plinth even harder and only get the initial "donk" sound nothing after it. Or move your turntable to a place where the air-born vibrations can’t get to it as much, which is what I did, in the next room. No isolation BS in the same room is going to be a fix for this, if hanging the turntable in the air couldn’t fix the problem. The only way is to get rid of the broad band frequency that’s doing it (the sub) notch filter may help a little, but it needs to be board band, may as well not have a sub then. You can hang your turntable as I even tried from the ceiling on fishing line and it will still happen. The the initial sound of the "donk" tap of your finger is the first mechanical starter vibration, but the growing intensity of the following earth quake rumble is "air-born" feedback, which you have end of story, don't listen to others trying to sell you stuff like special voodoo springs ect. Would a subsonic filter fix this or what’s the best solution in you eyes?There you are. Stylus resting on a still record then tapped the plinth and the sub rumbled like crazy. Paulgardner OP10 posts 11-18-2019 5:27am you were spot on. Do you have another table you can try out and see if it has the same issue?

#Cool record edit pro notch filter how to

You'll notice I use the word "seems to" a lot in my post, there's obviously some supposition on my part, as I was never able to figure out how to get mine to work satisfactorily in my system and I know many others have that table and love it. I really liked mine and wanted to love it, but it didn't work in my less than ideal setup where many other tables have worked great. There seems to be a consensus that it needs to be really well isolated. There are also many who love it and report no problems with it. There are a number of reports of this issue if you do a web search. It may have something to do with the magnetic bearing tonearm design.

cool record edit pro notch filter

It's surprising and unfortunate, because it does seem to be a solid and well built table.

cool record edit pro notch filter

I seem to remember issues with what you've described at high volumes also. Granted, I have springy floors and it wasn't very well isolated, but I've had a number of tables before and after it that didn't have that problem. I couldn't walk anywhere near it without the arm jumping around. I had a Concept and it was super sensitive to footfalls. You will not get any feedback with this, let me tell you! To the creme de la creme, a concrete/ABS/sand and granite stand with carbon fiber. To at the other extreme filling a box a couple inches deep with sand (always mix with oil so it packs down and stays dust-free) with a platform of wood, MDF or stone laying on top of the sand. It can be as simple as taking something like some lids from a large open mouth jar, turning them upside down, packing with sand and putting the table on them.

cool record edit pro notch filter

The comparison is not between the filter and no filter, the comparison is between the filter and a rack that lowers subsonic noise down to the same level. The guy telling you no one can hear the difference is missing the point. The extra vibration is still there, you've only gotten rid of the obvious part to the problem. But this does nothing to address the real problem. Either way results in added platter/cartridge vibration that can over drive your subs.Ī filter is one answer. There's also mechanical vibrations coming from the rack being made to move by low bass sound pressure. There's mechanical vibrations coming from the sub sitting on the floor. People confuse feedback with rumble and its easy to do since it all seems the same but they're really quite different and its a really hard problem to solve if you can't tell the difference. Its unlikely you're getting feedback, unless you have some really lightweight rig with a dust cover sitting on a flimsy particle board rack, something that extreme.












Cool record edit pro notch filter