Portable TT - which one ?
covmart
6 Posts
I'm tired of using the old Sesame Street Bird Bird player in the field. Mine needs to be perfectly level to play worth a shit. 45's is my thing.I'm looking at the Vestax Handy Trax. I'm not a fan of Numark.Whaddya using?
Comments
having to open & close the player is annoying if you are trying to listen to a bunch of records - the Sound Burger also isn't that good for playing dusty / dirty records - it's more of a precision machine for playing the occasional M- Italian library record at a Euro record show lol - I have a Mister Disc( the Audio Technica US version of the 'burger) & never use it - the Columbia GP3 is the best overall player for down & dirty digging
BTW: have you seen what Sound Burgers & Mister Discs go for these days?? 400 bucks in 'new in the box' condition - 175 'used' with no needle!?!?
But you don't have to close to the player to use it, especially if you're going through a stack of records. The one thing that does seem a bit annoying is that the tonearm is so light, you can't play anything that's not perfectly flat.
I agree that the GP3 is pretty awesome for heavy duty use. My only beef with it is that 1) it's bulky (though not as bad as the Vestax) and 2) mono headphone jack that you can convert with an adapter but that's still kind of pain. That said, if I'm "in the field" - I'd either want a GP3 or Soundburger.
I accidentally dropped my GP3 from shoulder height once & it sort of shattered - I pieced it back together with superglue & it plays good as new! I'd like to see someone do that with one of these flimsy Numark or Vestax players
I really don't use it too often anymore, my daughter uses it way more than me. Funny thing
is clumsy dad has done more damage to it than a 4 year old playing her Mickey Mouse records has.
What is this I hear about a headphone jack to make it stereo?
The mono jack is my only complaint.
It's a simple mono-->stereo adapter jack. Radio Shack sells 'em for a few bucks. What I did was velcro tape wrap them and then put Velcro on the inside of the GP3 lid so I always know where to find it.
Good tip, I am so copying that,
but turning mono into stereo is only doubling the mono, right? I haven't used my GP3 in a long time, but I remember it being mono and that it was bad in certain situations because the drums or whatever could be panned hard left and you might not hear them. If you use an adaptor then it's just going to make it double the mono isn't it? Maybe I'm missing a piece of the science, but you can't make a mono source turn stereo with an adaptor can you? Stereo as in, both sides of the headphones, but not stereo as in the full spectrum of the recording.
correct me if I am wrong.
the mono signal just combines the left and right signals into one...the mono needle inthe GP3 just doesnt read one channel...it reads both channels and it combines them into one mono signal. When you put stereo headphones into the GP3, yes you just hear it coming out of the left channel on the headphones, but the signal you are hearing out of the left side of the headphones is the left and right channel from the record combined into one signal...the "bands" on the stereo headphone jack are for reading 2 channels, but since the headphone jack is mono, the combined signal only gets routed to the left channel of the stereo headphones. You arent missing anything, you are hearing all the sound...a mono headphone adapter just allows the signal to come out of both sides of the headphoes
I'll have to go back and test.
good riddance, those things are pieces of crap.
FAIL.
i probably should have scooped up on one when dustygroove was carrying them a few years back.
my vestax is cool but the speakers blew out a year ago and ive had that thing for only 3 years.
if anybody has a solid connect for an original gp3 holler on the pm's.
Top input, thanks. Sounds like the GP-3 is the way to go.
I found a German seller, but with shipping north of $40 I'm gonna hunt around some more.
http://www.ongaku.de/shop_geraet_detail.php?gpage=4&gid=387&cur=usd&lang=en