Ok, as a fellow audiophile I have too put my word in. 
First lets look at the prices of top of the line components. For all the 
interchangable and truly customizable setup the phonograph has the most 
options, with many different types of cartridges, arms, motors, pre-amps etc. 
YOu can easlily get a $100,000 phonograph. The most expensive CD player I have 
seen (please post others) was $45,000 NAim. 
Secon: Todays recordings are in a digital world. Everything is recorded 
digitally. But at 24-bit "picture" of the wave at a 96KHZ bandwidth. This is 
compressed t oa 16-bit 44.1KHZ CD image. However, when the master for the 
record is made lasers are used to create and exact picture of the wave captured 
by the microphone with the accuracy of the 24-hbit recording. Or in true analog 
recordings a true reproduction. Giving you with vinyl a more spactious sound 
with much mroe depth and dynamic constrast without drowing out the other 
instruments because of there relation to vinal. That is the danger with 24-bit 
mixes going to a CD somthing that you hear (viloins in a metal song) on the 
24-bit recording which are identifiable could be lost by the compression of the 
CD. With a vinyl done right you wont lose the highs and clarity of ALL the 
channels.
The negatives to vinyl
I will try to explain this the best I can from what I know feel free to correct 
thes section and repost if you know I am wrong. 
With the records you loose your bass response and bass curve because the tone 
arm and catridge with its mass can absorb the low frequencys as they pass by 
the needle for the same reson that there low. When the frequency is lower that 
means there is less cycles per second and the tone arm moves with the notes 
rather than the needle because it has time too. Thats why customizing a 
turntable is such an important thing to get the right balance and match for the 
other components to create and accurate reproduction in sound. 
The positives of CD. Cost
However in terms of more accurate spatious dynamically efficient sound, records 
will produce the beswt sound so long as there is good equipment. If I was to go 
to Best Buy to build a listening system for records vs cds. The Cd would most 
definatly win. If I wen't to classic stero with a good turntable and hi-fi 
recording, and used there B&W 802Ds (If you don't know B&W you might not wan't 
to be a part of this conversation) on Krell amplifiers, not to mention the 
really sweet Denon reciever and krell preamps. (No subs required but available 
for when you want to absolutly make yourself deaf with zero distortion equally 
represented sound or if your a movie fan) That system even with the Naim 
$45,000 Cd player with a standard formant CD the record is going to win hands 
down. 

Also with tube amps and preamps vinyl would also beat the CD in terms of tone 
quality. 

What would out do vinyl is the 24-bit 96K recording or even and HD-Audio 
AES/EBU interface would win. So long as that is the original audio quality 
level. Eventually with HD-DVDs or Blu-Ray whichever wins the vinyl audio will 
be lost to digital. But still not a true replacment to the tone provided with 
an all analog recording combined with a all analog tube system. 

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: "D. Michael McIntyre" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

> On Saturday 16 February 2008, Christopher Stamper wrote: 
> 
> > I've never even seen a vinyl or whatever else. So I have no idea what 
> > [you're] talking about. 
> 
> http://youtube.com/watch?v=WIBnX4tJh7A 
> 
> -- 
> D. Michael McIntyre 
> 
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