Vinyl Police? Or Vinyl Mafia?
Moderators: piaptk, tragwag, Steve E., Aussie0zborn
I heard the same thing. That Panasonic is not going to discontinue every TT line. They are going to still make the more recent ones in limited quantities.
Those who truly care about their sound will likely still want to play some vinyl. I see serious dj's mix formats a lot these days. Playing both cd's and vinyl. Or, using a time coded vinyl system as well as regular vinyl in the same set.
As far as I'm concerned the time coded vinyl systems are keeping TT's in clubs. If it werent for the time coded vinyl we would see the decks gone and just cdj's and a mixer. Less gear for the club to maintain and fix. Less space for the dj setup (ie more space for patrons). If a venue could get by without TT's it would.
My 2 cents...
Those who truly care about their sound will likely still want to play some vinyl. I see serious dj's mix formats a lot these days. Playing both cd's and vinyl. Or, using a time coded vinyl system as well as regular vinyl in the same set.
As far as I'm concerned the time coded vinyl systems are keeping TT's in clubs. If it werent for the time coded vinyl we would see the decks gone and just cdj's and a mixer. Less gear for the club to maintain and fix. Less space for the dj setup (ie more space for patrons). If a venue could get by without TT's it would.
My 2 cents...
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The way that serato system can use regular records is totally a shit , I'm in hiphop and record many many scratches with both ways every session (yes , some idiots believe can make serious scratch recordings with serato , is like open heart surgery with picnic knives)
Try to play a record directly phono to pre , and try it passing by the serato.... the serato makes shit the direct phono sound that forward , when recording scratches with serato and regular records 2 systems needed , one with the serato (and one volume and eq) and other one regular system (other volume and eq).
Serato for me is only useful for strictly selectas , not a very useful dj tool , as I say for me , a dj do scratch , back-spins and that type of things , isn't a simply tune mixer , in that basis for me serato doesn't exist , isn't an option.
Regards
Try to play a record directly phono to pre , and try it passing by the serato.... the serato makes shit the direct phono sound that forward , when recording scratches with serato and regular records 2 systems needed , one with the serato (and one volume and eq) and other one regular system (other volume and eq).
Serato for me is only useful for strictly selectas , not a very useful dj tool , as I say for me , a dj do scratch , back-spins and that type of things , isn't a simply tune mixer , in that basis for me serato doesn't exist , isn't an option.
Regards
Very Busy days , some cutting works at least , soon online again
We must promote the use and abuse of vinyl records.
We must promote the use and abuse of vinyl records.
I suppose, the difference is the press is making 2 records per DJ's lifetime instead of the 100's per month it used to..maniman wrote:Hehehe , as long as timecoded records would needed the pressing plants still up and running , hehehe
generally its for reproduction.. but i like to play wif it sometimes..
I haven't really seen people use Serato to scratch. I have seem them switch between time coded vinyl and also play regular vinyl without issue. Not sure why you have seen such a difference in playback quality. My friends use version 3 of the box.
I don't use Serato. But, a few prominent DJ's in Chicago do. I won't name names. But, for sure, I've seen some well known guys playing with the system. It is all how you use it.
As long as you can still mix without beat matching software or staring at your computer screen (ie you can do it by ear) then you are a dj by my standards. Regardless of your format.
I don't use Serato. But, a few prominent DJ's in Chicago do. I won't name names. But, for sure, I've seen some well known guys playing with the system. It is all how you use it.
As long as you can still mix without beat matching software or staring at your computer screen (ie you can do it by ear) then you are a dj by my standards. Regardless of your format.
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The people I know who use Serato blow through time coded vinyl discs pretty fast. More like one set every few months. But still a pittance in comparison to days of pressing not too long ago.JayDC wrote:I suppose, the difference is the press is making 2 records per DJ's lifetime instead of the 100's per month it used to..
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I agree, one of the reasons I'm phasing it out of my act..maniman wrote:The way that serato system can use regular records is totally a shit , I'm in hiphop and record many many scratches with both ways every session (yes , some idiots believe can make serious scratch recordings with serato , is like open heart surgery with picnic knives)
Regards
on a side note, it's rumored that pioneer is going to pick up the production of the technic's 1200..
I'm pretty sure that both technics and pioneer are part of panasonic...
I will say, if anything, the demand issue is not coz of less vinyl demand, as much as how awesome a technics turntable is built.. I've had mine since the early 90's, gigged them out a million times, hundreds of people have used them, and I even threw one at an ex girlfriend and it smashed on the hardwood floor, still works great, no repairs.. throwing it did cause a little dent on the side tho.. i mean very tiny..
generally its for reproduction.. but i like to play wif it sometimes..
opcode66 wrote:The people I know who use Serato blow through time coded vinyl discs pretty fast. More like one set every few months. But still a pittance in comparison to days of pressing not too long ago.JayDC wrote:I suppose, the difference is the press is making 2 records per DJ's lifetime instead of the 100's per month it used to..
WELL DONT USE ORTOFONE CONCORDS
never had an issue wit my needle messing up a vinyl.. I use stanton 500al's or 680hp's..
I know for a fact that ortofones will damage vinyl.. not meant for back queing...
The only serato vinyl i replaced was the originals, since they where warped.. The ones I use are custom 180g splattered color vinyl, that i got from a shady guy in a 7-11 parking lot in Los Angeles. $60 each, true story..
generally its for reproduction.. but i like to play wif it sometimes..
Panasonic is not discontinuing the entire line. They are however only going to make them in limited quantities. From what I understand, the discontinuation of the entire line was only an Internet rumor and was not an official statement.JayDC wrote:on a side note, it's rumored that pioneer is going to pick up the production of the technic's 1200..
Matsushita owns both but they are separate entities.JayDC wrote:I'm pretty sure that both technics and pioneer are part of panasonic...
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- subkontrabob
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It's funny how persistent rumors and counter-rumors are. I didn't believe it myself.....opcode66 wrote:Panasonic is not discontinuing the entire line. They are however only going to make them in limited quantities. From what I understand, the discontinuation of the entire line was only an Internet rumor and was not an official statement.JayDC wrote:on a side note, it's rumored that pioneer is going to pick up the production of the technic's 1200..
well, check this out:
http://www.dmcdjchamps.com/news-view.php?n=Mjk5
"After more than 35 years as a leading manufacturer of analogue turntables, Panasonic has regretfully taken the decision to leave this market. However, Panasonic will continue to sell headphones under the Technics brand. "
looks like a legitimate piece of information to me........
sorry for taking the thread further off- topic, maybe we should open another ranting thread for this stuff?