Wow, very cool set up. Bravo for quality and stereo separation, I know it's not easy. I recognize the 8° back angle and the 7° in the shank. I'm working on a lathe/cutterhead too, completely from scratch and I've gone for the neumann standard too and 45/45 structure. Still lot of work, 3d printing, winding and machining before first test cuts. I'm trying to implement feedback and helium. Your cutterhead sounds very nice.
The reverse RIAA curve for the drivers is touchy to build manually because it's a physical recording an analog waveform onto a "plastic". Essentially "drawing the music".
Sounds great! I wonder if you could come up with a way to subtract the two waveforms and play back the difference. The naive approach probably wouldn't work well because any drift in the the clocks between the original and a re-capture would misalign them and hide the noise under the music again.
Solid drivers, 45*, vacuum for swarf lmao, that's pro,. 2 questions please, would not the weight of the handle introduce wow in the mechanical screw, also, what material is the stylus?
Don't get me wrong this super cool and I'm impressed by the sound quality but next you should try, even if it is for your self, a wave file not an mp3 converted to mp3 I mean like a bought wave file from beatport for example cause as far as I know mp3 are bad for recording them onto vinyl.
Its a french home recording machine from around 1950.I modified the motor for the platter and added a stepper for the lathe build the cutter head and preamps.
@Paul glitch for this cutterhead 50 watts per chanel but some heads need more power. The stylus is diamond from "MY SHANK" Blanks are from "MY SHANK" I'm not shure what material it is.
@Paul glitch Ca. 50 watts per channel for this Head, other cutterheads may need more power. Stylus is diamond from "MY SHANK" and blanks are from "MY SHANK". Its a french company. The material looks like vinyl but maybe its polycarbonate wich works very well.
Wow, very cool set up. Bravo for quality and stereo separation, I know it's not easy. I recognize the 8° back angle and the 7° in the shank. I'm working on a lathe/cutterhead too, completely from scratch and I've gone for the neumann standard too and 45/45 structure. Still lot of work, 3d printing, winding and machining before first test cuts. I'm trying to implement feedback and helium. Your cutterhead sounds very nice.
The reverse RIAA curve for the drivers is touchy to build manually because it's a physical recording an analog waveform onto a "plastic".
Essentially "drawing the music".
sounds great, really clean and good low end too!
sounds REALLY good!
Impressive...need one ASAP 😊
Good job !
👍👌😉👋
Wow!!!! Sounds great.
Sounds great! I wonder if you could come up with a way to subtract the two waveforms and play back the difference. The naive approach probably wouldn't work well because any drift in the the clocks between the original and a re-capture would misalign them and hide the noise under the music again.
The bass is deep!
Wow this is bad ass!!!!!!!
How to make or buy this machine?! I'm in love.... wow!!!
This is a 1949 french "Le Discographe" machine. I have done some modifications to it but the machine was originally built to cut 78s and is very old.
Cool
Amazing job my friend! ❤
I've in project to buid one by myself
What kind of speaker or coil did you used for the cuthead?
Drivers are Visaton BF 32
@@hippsterhoppster1855 thanks 👍
I've ordered 2x monacor spx 21m 3days ago, i hope they will do the job...
Solid drivers, 45*, vacuum for swarf lmao, that's pro,.
2 questions please,
would not the weight of the handle introduce wow in the mechanical screw,
also, what material is the stylus?
Did you make the Discography part as well or just the head? Great sounding!
Don't get me wrong this super cool and I'm impressed by the sound quality but next you should try, even if it is for your self, a wave file not an mp3 converted to mp3 I mean like a bought wave file from beatport for example cause as far as I know mp3 are bad for recording them onto vinyl.
Nice work. Did you make it from scratch or did you have to piece it together? Sounds great!
Its a french home recording machine from around 1950.I modified the motor for the platter and added a stepper for the lathe build the cutter head and preamps.
@Paul glitch for this cutterhead 50 watts per chanel but some heads need more power.
The stylus is diamond from "MY SHANK"
Blanks are from "MY SHANK"
I'm not shure what material it is.
@Paul glitch Ca. 50 watts per channel for this Head, other cutterheads may need more power.
Stylus is diamond from "MY SHANK" and blanks are from "MY SHANK".
Its a french company.
The material looks like vinyl but maybe its polycarbonate wich works very well.
@@hippsterhoppster1855scroll / screw speed & platter speed dead on are the essentials,amiright? lol
@@paulglitch4673wondering the same.
Hi nice video !! You make a cutter stylus ?
No,I bought the Stylus from"My Shank" in France
Hi. Could you tell me speakers specs and servo motor specs? Nice job!
How did it cost you to make roughly?
I spend about 1500 € to build it, but every Stylus is 250E and I rruined ca.9 pieces before it worked
Звук стерео получается?
yes Stereo
Don't suppose you did any video on the build itself?
Unfortunately I made no photos and no videos
@@hippsterhoppster1855 :-(
may i ask what vacuum u are using ? so silent :)
I'm sorry,my vacuum cleaner is loud but I have a very long tube and the vacuum cleaner in another room.