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khaotik | 23:34 Mon 15th Jul 2002 | How it Works
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My vague and limited knowledge of recording technology extends only as far as the fact that a vinyl record recreates sound through vibrations in the groove picked up by the stylus but I just can't get my head around the idea that such infinitely various and accurate sound reproduction depends something as crude as mere vibrations. And in stereo! There's got to be something more complicated going on. Can anyone give me a more detailed account of the process?
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Then I guess you must find loudspeakers equally unbelievable - a bit of vibrating paper making all that sound! A vinyl record has a groove carved into it that mirrors the original sound's waveform. If you were to look at the disc under magnification, you�d see, within the groove, the little horizontal peaks and valleys that correspond to the peaks and valleys of the original sound. And the amplitude of those peaks and valleys would be analogous to the amplitude (volume) of the original sound.The stereo data is carried in the walls of the groove. Simply put, two walls = two tracks. One side is modulated for one channel and the other is modulated for the other (left and right). In the cartridge two magnets and coils are set at the same angle as the record groove sides. Each groove side modulates a separate channel.

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