Played it often and it s never shown the slightest trace of excess wear.
Do picture vinyl sound bad.
A few exceptions exist.
Learn how to properly clean handle and play your records.
These ten mistakes can ruin your records and impede sound quality.
And in some cases if the mastering was handled better for the picture disc release than it was for the standard vinyl pressing the picture disc can sound better despite the downsides.
Some picture discs sound pretty good.
Vinyl can still push music to the limits of its dynamic range 55 70db but it often shies away from doing so in order to maintain sound quality.
10 things you should never do to your vinyl records.
Clear vinyl picture discs and glow in the dark pressings are more susceptible to poor playback.
Most picture discs do sound pretty horrible but they don t have to.
This is always uncomfortable for us as we understand how very badass an artistic picture disc can look but in the end if it s not going to be the best audio quality possible then we can t do it.
The david bowie picture disc 45s sound great.
But there s more to work with than just normal one color vinyl.
A good portion of them do but this is also a problem that can be applied to modern vinyl in general a lot of the time as well.
Barely a trace of surface noise and crystal clear sound.
Very few additives can be mixed into clear vinyl without jeopardizing the opacity which means there is a potential for worse sound quality albeit this drop is often imperceptible to the common listener.
One recent example is the picture disc release of liam gallagher s as you were cut by barry grint from alchemy.
Before weighing vinyl s ahem good and bad sides it helps to know how records are made.
Many picture discs do sound good.
There s very little compression so the loudest parts of those sounds often.
When pressing records through slyvinyl records we re often asked by bands about possibly doing picture discs and if they sound any different.
That s why snare drums cymbal splashes and other loud instruments have so much more punch in vinyl recordings.