Standard vinyl uses PVC, which contains plasticizers and carbon black (for color). These additives generate "vinyl roar"—background noise that masks low-level detail. (Super Vinyl – Profile) is a proprietary proprietary compound. It is virtually static-free, has no plasticizers, and is translucent rather than opaque. Why translucent? Because it is pure . The result is a noise floor so low that on a silent passage, you hear the reverb of the studio, not the hiss of the medium.
Mastered at 200 Grams , these pressings are famously heavy, flat, and designed to reduce resonance.
Just finished capturing my latest treasure: on Classic Records’ 200-gram Quiex SV-P pressing from their 1969 reissue series. Thought I’d share some impressions for anyone curious about this specific version.
(Insert your download link here - Mega, Mediafire, etc.)
Standard vinyl uses PVC, which contains plasticizers and carbon black (for color). These additives generate "vinyl roar"—background noise that masks low-level detail. (Super Vinyl – Profile) is a proprietary proprietary compound. It is virtually static-free, has no plasticizers, and is translucent rather than opaque. Why translucent? Because it is pure . The result is a noise floor so low that on a silent passage, you hear the reverb of the studio, not the hiss of the medium.
Mastered at 200 Grams , these pressings are famously heavy, flat, and designed to reduce resonance. Standard vinyl uses PVC, which contains plasticizers and
Just finished capturing my latest treasure: on Classic Records’ 200-gram Quiex SV-P pressing from their 1969 reissue series. Thought I’d share some impressions for anyone curious about this specific version. It is virtually static-free, has no plasticizers, and
(Insert your download link here - Mega, Mediafire, etc.) The result is a noise floor so low
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