h a l f b a k e r yMay contain nuts.
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When you are 33&1/3 years old--33 years, 4 months; have a celebration--likely with LPs as gifts.
When you reach your 45th birthday, people can give you 7" records.
Finally, when you are 78, you get the 10" ones.
(What of the 16's? Is it 16, 16&2/3, or 16&1/6?)
(??) Re: 16 rpm records
http://palimpsest.s...00/05/msg00007.html Mostly, they were used for talking books [LoriZ, Dec 05 2004]
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How do you give an LP? I thought it was just a mood... |
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Of the 16's, I believe the average rpm is 0.002, with all
the play they get. |
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I thought LP was Liquid Propane. |
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Always wondered if it was pure coincidence that 33+45=78. The extra third sort of ruins it. |
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George Harrison apparently dabbled with this idea, at 33 at least...but alas never got the chance for number 78. |
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Long-Playing. Should have thought of this a few decades ago. They're not making them anymore, right? So they'll become more rare and this will just become impossible, especially by the time I'm 78. Hey, is there a # associated with the CD? |
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//They're not making them anymore, right?// |
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Wrong. visit any record shop that caters to DJs and people who want others to think they are DJs and you will see stacks of them. HMV in Oxford has a pretty big vinyl section, and Massive Records sell little else. |
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This definitely makes me feel old...because I know what the numbers mean without asking. BCD = before CD. Although a 78 was something I used to see in Antique shops, so I'm not THAT old.
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My first record-player (that's what we called them in those days) had a 16 rpm setting. If you played an LP at 16, it was almost exactly one octave lower in pitch, and almost exactly half speed; great for learning guitar soloes. LPs were originally recorded at 33 1/3; later it became just 33 rpm. |
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[angel] - On the label possibly, but the angular velocity was and is 33 1/3 rpm clockwise. |
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[Ling] - BCD=binary coded decimal, as in EBCDIC; everybody knows that. |
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16, 33, 45, 78 - anything to do with
harmonics of the pickup/sylus/needle/
arm? It would be easier to balance and
eliminate such if the speeds were
multiples or similar... |
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[benjamin]: Well, I dunno. I'm sure I read (in that authoritative journal "Somewhere") that the actual recording speed was altered around 1976. Also, I've just checked my turntable (quartz-locked), and as well as I can measure (by atomic clock), it's closer to 33 than 33 1/3. Not that it matters... |
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[angel] - can you point me to a source that agrees with you? Not that it matters, of course ;) |
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[benjamin], it was supposed to be a pun on old age. Not a good one, admittedly... |
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I thought it was "lost profit" |
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Alternatively, celebrate birthdays at 1/3 century, 1/7 century, 10000 days (about 29 years, or transit of Saturn), etc. |
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These are the birthdays that I celebrate. I'm hoping for some retro-LP technology to come along to fill the 33-year gap between 45 and 78, though. |
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I went to a Billy Joel concert once (OK, I'm not proud of it - I was young and impressionable). He'd just broken up with Christie Brinkley and celebrated his birthday, and he announced "At 33, I was a long player <wink>, but now I'm 45 and a single" |
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