The expensive machines designed to de magnetize records before play are de magnetizing the carbon used to make vinyl black so a colored vinyl record with no black in it may actually sound better right out of the wrapper than a black one.
Colored vinyl records sound quality.
We do not press 180 gram color vinyl.
Colored vinyl records history.
The earliest examples of colored vinyl records date to 1908 with the introduction of blue amberol cylinders by the edison company.
Other vinyl colored or clear can be dead quiet.
Rather than pressing directly into pure vinyl picture discs are made from a sandwich of materials to achieve a full color printed effect.
These cylinders which were more durable and had longer playing time than the earlier versions used celluloid that was dyed blue in order to make them stand out in the marketplace.
Vinyl is booming and if you own a record player you ve probably got a nice collection of records with music you love one of vinyl s great benefits is sound quality but which records bring out.
I own records pressed in every color of the rainbow.
Pressing a picture disc is a little different to standard black or colored records.
The only way there would be a difference in sound quality is if you get the picture records which don t sound as good.
Very generally speaking the more you mix the more sound quality is affected.
Does the color of a vinyl record affect sound quality.
180 gram vinyl is only available in audiophile black vinyl or natural uncolored vinyl.
The result is a vinyl record that typically suffers from increased surface noise and overall lower quality sound.
If you re looking for the short version of whether colored vinyl is worse you can walk away with this vinyl record production has come a long way in the last 20 years and most modern colored vinyl is on par with black pressings.
Colored just tends to be more expensive because it s limited edition and appeals more to people who want to collect them.
Colored vinyls are cool but there isn t he difference in the colored and black.