Many people instantly know what THIS is. Others don't have a clue
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Younger vinyl fanatics would like a word.
Those are just young old people, give it time.
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obs studio logo
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It's whole point in life is to spin
that's sad
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Itās a practice ninja star for little Japanese kindergartners?
Wait, in English people call the kids in kindergarten kindergartners?
(cries in German)
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Those are just young old people, give it time.
some DJs die young
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It literally says what it is right on it lol
It's a record adapter.
Still doesn't explain if you don't have at least some knowledge of it
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I have not seen those in many decades...
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New ubuntu flavor
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Younger vinyl fanatics would like a word.
Are there still really a lot of 45's in circulation?
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Still doesn't explain if you don't have at least some knowledge of it
I'm just wondering how it works. I know there are different sizes, and thus different speeds that the record needs to spin at but all the turntables I've ever used had a switch for the two most common sizes. I have to assume this is for slowing/speeding up how fast it turns on a table without an adjustable speed, but I can't quite intuit how that would work.
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Wait, in English people call the kids in kindergarten kindergartners?
(cries in German)
What do you call them in Germany?
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I'm just wondering how it works. I know there are different sizes, and thus different speeds that the record needs to spin at but all the turntables I've ever used had a switch for the two most common sizes. I have to assume this is for slowing/speeding up how fast it turns on a table without an adjustable speed, but I can't quite intuit how that would work.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]I think it's just an adapter because the holes are different size, so this goes in the larger hole to fit the spindle. I've never used a record either though so...
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This post did not contain any content.wrote on last edited by [email protected]
^(i^ ^actually^ ^thought^ ^this^ ^was^ ^ammunition^ ^from^ ^an^ ^old^ ^disc^ ^gun)^
...all my turntables have included 45RPM adapters for the spindle; never needed anything separate for the records...
...i have a 5" adapter ring for 3" compact discs, though: that has seen legitimate use in all my slot-loading players, although drawer-loading players always included detents for smaller discs, and of course portable players snap directly onto the spindle...
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I'm just wondering how it works. I know there are different sizes, and thus different speeds that the record needs to spin at but all the turntables I've ever used had a switch for the two most common sizes. I have to assume this is for slowing/speeding up how fast it turns on a table without an adjustable speed, but I can't quite intuit how that would work.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]The adapter does not affect the speed of the turntable, and you would still need to flip the switch on the record player to 45 RPM. These physically smaller (7") records were commonly referred to as singles because they would hold a single song per side.
The larger (12") 33 1/3 RPM records had a smaller spindle than 45s, which meant you would need to use an adapter like the one pictured to play a 45, as demonstrated in the video shared by @thermal_shock.
Since 33s were physically larger and played at a slower speed, you could fit much more music on each side of the disc. That's why those discs would be used for entire albums, and were also commonly referred to as LPs (Long Plays).
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It's a hardware jailbreak, practically illegal in modern times.
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The adapter does not affect the speed of the turntable, and you would still need to flip the switch on the record player to 45 RPM. These physically smaller (7") records were commonly referred to as singles because they would hold a single song per side.
The larger (12") 33 1/3 RPM records had a smaller spindle than 45s, which meant you would need to use an adapter like the one pictured to play a 45, as demonstrated in the video shared by @thermal_shock.
Since 33s were physically larger and played at a slower speed, you could fit much more music on each side of the disc. That's why those discs would be used for entire albums, and were also commonly referred to as LPs (Long Plays).
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Huh. I guess I just never saw the different sizes having a different sized spindle hole. My dad has a collection of records, and there are two different sizes of records among them, but they all have the same sized hole in the center. However, none of them appear to be 45s. They're all 10 inch or 12 inch LPs. I was aware of the smaller 45s, I just didn't know their hole was way larger.
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Like everything in the universe. Some know some don't. Good shit post.
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Huh. I guess I just never saw the different sizes having a different sized spindle hole. My dad has a collection of records, and there are two different sizes of records among them, but they all have the same sized hole in the center. However, none of them appear to be 45s. They're all 10 inch or 12 inch LPs. I was aware of the smaller 45s, I just didn't know their hole was way larger.
That's awesome, you're one of today's lucky 10,000.
It supposedly had something to do with calculus and the ratio between the diameter of the inner most groove to the diameter of the outermost groove being optimal at that size, but I'm not sure how much of that is genuine or just marketing. I've also heard that the larger hole is better for the mechanisms in jukeboxes.
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Are there still really a lot of 45's in circulation?
Oh yeah. Lots if vintage record shops have them.
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What do you call them in Germany?
Kindengartenkind (Kindergarten child). We don't use KindergƤrtner, but I'd expect the educator to be the gardener in that context