Yep http://www.pressthisrecord.com/ May be I am missing somethingthomas wrote:Dietrich hello,
That's the one.
Mossboss hello,
Pleasure.
May I pick your brain?
PressThisRecord?

Moderators: piaptk, tragwag, Steve E., Aussie0zborn
Yep http://www.pressthisrecord.com/ May be I am missing somethingthomas wrote:Dietrich hello,
That's the one.
Mossboss hello,
Pleasure.
May I pick your brain?
PressThisRecord?
Yes that is a good list but incomplete and out of date. I'm hoping we can create a current and complete list from this topic. Also, one of the plants on that list is no longer pressing but simply a broker and has forgotten to tell anyone.Daimon Terr wrote:I think somebody has compiled a very good list of currently operating pressing plants:-)
I'm not sure that a thin record is a problem - as long as it is flat. I'm begining to think that anything more than 140 grams for a 12" pressing is a waste of vinyl. I have an Island 12" single that must weigh around 90 grams and it is perfectly flat with very deep grooves beautifully cut!TotalSonic wrote: Dynamic/Sun were really good people - although they tended to make a thin record.
Agreed - beyond a very basic threshold of necessary weight to insure proper molding it's more of an aesthetic thing. 120 grams is usually way more than enough. 110 grams just have a vibe of being paltry to me though - and most DJ's I know feel the same way. It's certainly a little easier to get consistently flat records with less attentiveness to cycle times if weight is above 120 grams though.Aussie0zborn wrote:I'm not sure that a thin record is a problem - as long as it is flat.TotalSonic wrote: Dynamic/Sun were really good people - although they tended to make a thin record.
100% agree with you. There's absolutely no reason to go over around 140gram pressings I can think of except to satisfy criteria that has been marketed to audiophiles.I'm begining to think that anything more than 140 grams for a 12" pressing is a waste of vinyl.
Of course - groove depth is set during mastering and the weight of the record has no effect on it (unless other issues such as non-fill are occurring).I have an Island 12" single that must weigh around 90 grams and it is perfectly flat with very deep grooves beautifully cut!
my cymbalism labels are pressed thru MPO. they do an amazing job - from the test press to final press, quality is amazing! we used to use ACME in canada when we were pressing ourselves before the UK P&D happened and ACME wasnt too bad either. i think they shut their doors though, sucks for me because they still had our first four releases' stampers so there's no chance of a repress unless we can a) get those back or b) redo the whole process again to press em.Aussie0zborn wrote:Disques MPO (Moulages Plastiques de l'Ouest) is an Alpha Toolex equipped plant. They make superior pressings and have done so since the 50s. Initially a husband and wife business, it was handed down to the sons who grew the business to include optical disc manufacturing plants in a number of countries on all continents. One of MPO's big markets for vinyl record pressing in the 80s was the UK. Many major indpependent UK releases were pressed by MPO whose pressings bear the mark "MPO" in the dead wax area.
MPO bought sixteen of the eighteen automatic presses when VPI in Paris closed recently - presumably not to add to their plant but more to keep them out of the market. These are the unusal automatic presses with the lower sliding mould which is the subject of another forum discussion here.
MPO is the current owner of EMTEC (who took over the BASF blank tape business).
Blue and green solution????
Of course - groove depth is set during mastering and the weight of the record has no effect on it (unless other issues such as non-fill are occurring).TotalSonic wrote:Agreed - beyond a very basic threshold of necessary weight to insure proper molding it's more of an aesthetic thing. 120 grams is usually way more than enough. 110 grams just have a vibe of being paltry to me though - and most DJ's I know feel the same way. It's certainly a little easier to get consistently flat records with less attentiveness to cycle times if weight is above 120 grams though.Aussie0zborn wrote:I'm not sure that a thin record is a problem - as long as it is flat.TotalSonic wrote: Dynamic/Sun were really good people - although they tended to make a thin record.
100% agree with you. There's absolutely no reason to go over around 140gram pressings I can think of except to satisfy criteria that has been marketed to audiophiles.I'm begining to think that anything more than 140 grams for a 12" pressing is a waste of vinyl.
I have an Island 12" single that must weigh around 90 grams and it is perfectly flat with very deep grooves beautifully cut!
i wasnt sure who made the stampers for acme. i'm sure if it came down to demand for the first three releases, we could just get them redone in the uk and not deal with shipping the stampers over there and all that.dietrich10 wrote:cymbalism - did you contact mastercraft to see if he still has parts to make you new stampers off the original cut?
D
Daimon Terr wrote:I think somebody has compiled a very good list of currently operating pressing plants:-)
http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/byform/mailing-lists/arsclist/2009/04/msg00103.html