Well, the actual grooves in the vinyl does get shorter the closer you
are to the center of the record, but since the rotation speed of the
record is the same (i.e. it always takes the same amount of time to
get to the starting point of a groove), the length of the music is the
same no matter where on the record a groove is located.
But that may be what Sebastian was saying. Just wanted to make it
clear.
P
---Sebastian Herrfurth <seher@cs.tu-berlin.de> wrote:
quoted 11 lines Hi,
>
> Hi,
>
> On Tue, 5 Jan 1999, Irene McC wrote:
>
> > Due to post-new-year-wooze lack of proof reading, I obviously
> > meant "needle" instead of "needed" in my previous flurry of e-mails.
> >
> > Sooooorry if I added to any confusion...
>
> I'm sure you know what a runout groove is (and didn't meant this) so
you
quoted 1 line know lock grooves. Lock grooves have a duration of just on rotation
> know lock grooves. Lock grooves have a duration of just on rotation
of
quoted 2 lines the record (so they're longer if they're on the outer side and get
> the record (so they're longer if they're on the outer side and get
> shorter to the center), no beginning and no end. While the groove on
a
quoted 16 lines record normally looks like a spiral a look groove is just a circle.
> record normally looks like a spiral a look groove is just a circle.
>
> Well, hope this helps (if not, I can try it in German, but who will
> understand beside you and Thaddi ?).
>
> Bye
>
> Sebastian
>
> --
> Sebastian Herrfurth (seher@cs.tu-berlin.de)
>
> pages for Bernd Friedmann / Riz Maslen / Daniel Meier / DJ Krush / ...
> at http://user.cs.tu-berlin.de/~seher/music.html
>
>
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