Vinyl records have been delighting listeners and collectors since the 1900s.
What size did vinyl records come in.
We have details on sizes speeds and best way to convert.
The phonograph disc record was the primary medium used for music reproduction throughout the 20th century.
It had co existed with the phonograph cylinder from the late 1880s and had effectively superseded it by around 1912.
At a certain point records can become cramped with grooves and have to expand in size to accommodate the extra music play while maintaining the quality of the audio.
The difference in vinyl record speeds 33 45 and 78 records 33 45 78.
Wikipedia also 10 vinyl.
A 7 inch record was simply more convenient for single tunes than a 12 inch one.
If you are a new comer to vinyl you may wonder what these numbers actually mean.
Eight track and cassette tapes were introduced in the 1960s.
By the mid 1980s more cassettes than vinyl records were sold.
The most common 33 1 3 rpm record was 12 the 45 rpm was 7 and the 78 rpm was cut in both 12 and 16.
Because vinyl records can become scratched warped and dirty other formats slowly took over.
Us vinyl sales in 2017 reached 15 6 million and 16 7 million for 2018.
Vinyl lp records enjoyed a resurgence in the early 2010s.
In reality of course the speed didn t make any difference.
In the mid 2000s gradually records made of any material began to be called vinyl records or simply vinyl.
In 1982 the digital compact disc came to market and superseded both cassettes and lps by 1991.
Vinyl records come in different speeds and sizes do you know what kind you have.
7 inch 10 inch and 12 inch.
33 45 and 78 rotations per minute rpm.
You may think are these related to the magical numbers from lost.
Vinyl records typically come in three speeds.
The size of the stylus effectively determined the size of the grooves in a record and the recordable frequency range limited by this groove size determined a speed between 70 and 90 rpm.
Vinyl sales in the uk reached 2 8 million in 2012.
The lp was soon confronted by the 45 a 7 inch 180 mm diameter fine grooved vinyl record playing at 45 rpm.
Nonetheless the public allowed itself to be duped and in 1951 columbia began making 45s too.
Records come in three standard sizes.
Last year in the united states vinyl sales were over 1 000 higher than a decade prior.
Vinyl record sizes differ based on how much music is stored on the surface of the disk.