Guest Baz Posted June 9, 2006 Posted June 9, 2006 Now call me stupid, but why in most case's is styreen presses more 'valuable' than Vinyl presses its one thats always bugged me, Rarity? surley the collector would much prefer the vinyl press as they last longer and you have less trouble with them, hence the vinyl more disirable. I know a few west cost collectors, i might be wrong here but quite a few west cost are styreen right?? Example Sam & Kitty i've got something good Four brothers (going by JM's book) DJ £100 DJ vinyl £75 DJ styreen £150 Styreen £100 Now i know what one out of that lot i would rather have or is it a case of oh look i have it on the DJ styreen much rarer
Guest WPaulVanDyk Posted June 9, 2006 Posted June 9, 2006 i might be stupid here but i never notice any different with records when brought so anyone know what it is with this styreen. I know of accetes etc but is styreen something pressed different to vinyl. All i seem to do is just buy a record when i see it
Guest Trevski Posted June 9, 2006 Posted June 9, 2006 (edited) Hi paul, Pull a few records out of your box. Any with a 'stuck on label' i.e. one you could peel off with your fingernail, is styrene. Vinyl labels are moulded on. Vinyl labels are placed in the mould when the hot wax is pressed between the two halves, styrene stuck on afterwards. Styrene is brittle, cracks easily, dont try to flex 'em!! Vinyl will flex. Know you know all there is to know, basicaly!! Edited June 9, 2006 by Trevski
Guest Baz Posted June 9, 2006 Posted June 9, 2006 Hi paul, Pull a few records out of your box. Any with a 'stuck on label' i.e. one you could peel off with your fingernail, is styrene. Vinyl labels are moulded on. Vinyl labels are placed in the mould when the hot wax is pressed between the two halves, styrene stuck on afterwards. Styrene is brittle, cracks easily, dont try to flex 'em!! Vinyl will flex. Know you know all there is to know, basicaly!! Are all Vinyl labels moulded, thought you got a few that were stuck on too? I find the easyest way is to run your fingers over the run in, the styrene usually expands out and the edge is usually bigger than vinyl which usually beviels to more of a 'point'
Pete S Posted June 9, 2006 Posted June 9, 2006 Now call me stupid, but why in most case's is styreen presses more 'valuable' than Vinyl presses its one thats always bugged me, Rarity? surley the collector would much prefer the vinyl press as they last longer and you have less trouble with them, hence the vinyl more disirable. I know a few west cost collectors, i might be wrong here but quite a few west cost are styreen right?? Example Sam & Kitty i've got something good Four brothers (going by JM's book) DJ £100 DJ vinyl £75 DJ styreen £150 Styreen £100 Now i know what one out of that lot i would rather have or is it a case of oh look i have it on the DJ styreen much rarer They aren't more expensive just because they are styrene, there's usually a reason! With the Sam & Kitty, it's a Chicago recording so logically they are likely to sell more copies on the East Coast, served by vinyl pressings. They would have probably done a limited run of styrene pressings at Monarch over on the West Coast. The Sam & Kitty West Coast demo is nice looking though
Guest Trevski Posted June 9, 2006 Posted June 9, 2006 (edited) Are all Vinyl labels moulded, thought you got a few that were stuck on too? I find the easyest way is to run your fingers over the run in, the styrene usually expands out and the edge is usually bigger than vinyl which usually beviels to more of a 'point' Never seen a 'stuck on' vinyl label. Syrene always stuck on, or painted on. Even without looking at the labels, once you know, you can tell at a glace, really. Edited June 9, 2006 by Trevski
Guest Baz Posted June 9, 2006 Posted June 9, 2006 They aren't more expensive just because they are styrene, there's usually a reason! With the Sam & Kitty, it's a Chicago recording so logically they are likely to sell more copies on the East Coast, served by vinyl pressings. They would have probably done a limited run of styrene pressings at Monarch over on the West Coast. The Sam & Kitty West Coast demo is nice looking though Didn't mean it like that Pete proberly explained it wrong on my behalf, for it to be only say £50 differnce between the two of the sam and kitty, there cant be that many less copys of the styrene than the vinyl can there we all know rarity dont often constitute price, what i was more getting at, IMO i would have thought the vinyl would be more disireable due to the better 'qualitys' you get from it, hence bringing the price of the vinyl up more, if you see where im coming from
Pete S Posted June 9, 2006 Posted June 9, 2006 Didn't mean it like that Pete proberly explained it wrong on my behalf, for it to be only say £50 differnce between the two of the sam and kitty, there cant be that many less copys of the styrene than the vinyl can there we all know rarity dont often constitute price, what i was more getting at, IMO i would have thought the vinyl would be more disireable due to the better 'qualitys' you get from it, hence bringing the price of the vinyl up more, if you see where im coming from The one in the photo - which is the one I'm selling on ebay - is the only one I've ever seen!
Cover-up Posted June 9, 2006 Posted June 9, 2006 Styrene cue-burn gets right on my wick - that lovely 3 second "SSSSSSsssssssshhhhhHHHHHHHGGGGGGGGGRRRRRRRRRR" you get once it's been back-cued for DJing ONCE...
Gene-r Posted June 9, 2006 Posted June 9, 2006 Styrene cue-burn gets right on my wick - that lovely 3 second "SSSSSSsssssssshhhhhHHHHHHHGGGGGGGGGRRRRRRRRRR" you get once it's been back-cued for DJing ONCE... Know the feeling. I ruined a £400 styrene record in the very same way.
Chalky Posted June 12, 2006 Posted June 12, 2006 Styrene cue-burn gets right on my wick - that lovely 3 second "SSSSSSsssssssshhhhhHHHHHHHGGGGGGGGGRRRRRRRRRR" you get once it's been back-cued for DJing ONCE... Know the feeling. I ruined a £400 styrene record in the very same way. simple answer is don't wind and rewind when cueing the records, just put the needle on and play.
Gene-r Posted June 12, 2006 Posted June 12, 2006 simple answer is don't wind and rewind when cueing the records, just put the needle on and play. Thanks Chalky - DOH! Why didn't I think of that myself???
Nick Hackett Posted June 13, 2006 Posted June 13, 2006 simple answer is don't wind and rewind when cueing the records, just put the needle on and play. I never backwind records,like chalky said just put the needle on the record if thers a slight delay..thats what the mics for,i bought a September Jones with a 2sec 'backwind' hiss dont do it folks,save your styrene from the dredded hisssssss.
Mike Posted June 13, 2006 Posted June 13, 2006 sep jones on canadian is vinyl which sort of ties in any other vinyl canadians only?
Chalky Posted June 13, 2006 Posted June 13, 2006 Styrene (properly, Polystyrene). Hard, relatively inflexible plastic used to press records, mainly 7-inch singles, mainly using the Injection Moulding process. The material is heated to a liquid form and is then squirted or injected into the closed stampers in the press. This requires that the labels be either glued or painted on after the record leaves the press. The cost savings to the manufacturer comes from the extended life of the stampers because of the lack of a heating cycle to the stampers. The material can also be reused without noticeable change to its moulding properties. Styrene records will therefore usually have very quiet surfaces when found in an UNPLAYED Mint condition, but unfortunately they will wear to a noisy condition rapidly, especially if played with a bad stylus or an improperly tracking tone arm. They also are more prone to Cue Burn. The Columbia Records Pittman, New Jersey pressing plant was once the major source of Injection Moulded Styrene pressings, and pressings from this plant are found on MANY small labels. Look for the glued-on labels. Painted-on labels can be found on records from the Amy/Bell/Mala group. Vinyl (properly Polyvinyl Chloride). Relatively flexible material used since the early 1930s to make non-breakable records. Its fumes are an acknowledged carcinogen, so don't breathe in deeply when you have your next holy burning of Beatles or back-masked devil-worship records. :-) Usually pressed by Compression Moulding which allows the label to be an integral part of the pressing itself. This process also requires that there be extra material which spills out the sides of the press, therefore this extra material is routinely ground up and re-used. Because vinyl does not re-heat and re-cool to a smooth, glossy surface, the excessive use of re-grind mixed in with Virgin Vinyl can account for the inherently noisy surface of even unplayed Mint examples of the cheap pressings that some record companies used. Noise can be seen AND HEARD by looking at and/or playing the un-grooved surface of the lead-in and lead-out areas. If this area looks or sounds grainy, then the grooves will also have some of this grainy background sound. The stampers used for the compression moulding process will start to break down after only 1,000 pressings because they are forced to expand and contract when heated by steam at the start of the pressing cycle and then cooled to solidify the record. Some companies routinely overused their stampers for their pop record series.
Guest Posted June 14, 2006 Posted June 14, 2006 I may be wrong but I should imagine some venues will compensate bounce caused by vibration from the floor by increasing the weight on the tone arm maybe even the headshell! anything over 2 grams is going to wear your styrene very quickly especially so when back cuing, be gentle with your styrene , on a personal note I always thought styrene in good nick has a cleaner sound than vinyl Derek
Russ Vickers Posted June 15, 2006 Posted June 15, 2006 (edited) on a personal note I always thought styrene in good nick has a cleaner sound than vinyl Derek Edited June 15, 2006 by Russ Vickers
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