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Phonograph
Phonograph
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A typical modern turntable, showing the curved tonearm with a headshell at the end, under which lies the magnetic cartridge and its attached stylus touching down on the grooves of a black record placed on the turntable's platter

A phonograph, later called a gramophone,[a] and since the 1940s a record player, or more recently a turntable, is a device for the mechanical and analogue reproduction of sound.[b] The sound vibration waveforms are recorded as corresponding physical deviations of a helical or spiral groove engraved, etched, incised, or impressed into the surface of a rotating cylinder or disc, called a record. To recreate the sound, the surface is similarly rotated while a playback stylus traces the groove and is therefore vibrated by it, faintly reproducing the recorded sound. In early acoustic phonographs, the stylus vibrated a diaphragm that produced sound waves coupled to the open air through a flaring horn, or directly to the listener's ears through stethoscope-type earphones.

Thomas Edison with his second phonograph, photographed by Levin Corbin Handy in Washington, D.C., April 1878
Emile Berliner with the first gramophone he developed, in Hanover, Germany

The phonograph was invented in 1877 by Thomas Edison;[1][2][3][4] its use would rise the following year. Alexander Graham Bell's Volta Laboratory made several improvements in the 1880s and introduced the graphophone, including the use of wax-coated cardboard cylinders and a cutting stylus that moved from side to side in a zigzag groove around the record. In the 1890s, Emile Berliner initiated the transition from phonograph cylinders to flat discs with a spiral groove running from the periphery to near the centre, coining the term gramophone for disc record players, which is predominantly used in many languages. Later improvements through the years included modifications to the turntable and its drive system, stylus, pickup system, and the sound and equalization systems.

The disc phonograph record was the dominant commercial audio distribution format throughout most of the 20th century, and phonographs became the first example of home audio that people owned and used at their residences.[5] In the 1960s, the use of 8-track cartridges and cassette tapes were introduced as alternatives. By the late 1980s, phonograph use had declined sharply due to the popularity of cassettes and the rise of the compact disc. However, records have undergone a revival since the late 2000s.[6]

Terminology

[edit]

The terminology used to describe record-playing devices is not uniform across the English-speaking world. In modern contexts, the playback device is often referred to as a "turntable", "record player", or "record changer". Each of these terms denotes distinct items. When integrated into a DJ setup with a mixer, turntables are colloquially known as "decks".[7] In later versions of electric phonographs, commonly known since the 1940s as record players or turntables, the movements of the stylus are transformed into an electrical signal by a transducer. This signal is then converted back into sound through a phono stage, an amplifier and one or more loudspeakers.[8]

The term "phonograph", meaning "sound writing", originates from the Greek words φωνή (phonē, meaning 'sound' or 'voice') and γραφή (graphē, meaning 'writing'). Similarly, the terms "gramophone" and "graphophone" have roots in the Greek words γράμμα (gramma, meaning 'letter') and φωνή (phōnē, meaning 'voice').

In British English, "gramophone" may refer to any sound-reproducing machine that utilizes disc records. These were introduced and popularized in the UK by the Gramophone Company. Initially, "gramophone" was a proprietary trademark of the company, and any use of the name by competing disc record manufacturers was rigorously challenged in court. However, in 1910, an English court ruled that the term had become generic.[9]

United States

[edit]
An Edison Standard Phonograph that uses wax cylinders

In American English, "phonograph", properly specific to machines made by Edison, was sometimes used in a generic sense as early as the 1890s to include cylinder-playing machines made by others. But it was then considered strictly incorrect to apply it to Emile Berliner's Gramophone, a different machine that played nonrecordable discs (although Edison's original Phonograph patent included the use of discs.[10])

Australia

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Wood engraving published in The Illustrated Australian News, depicting a public demonstration of new technology at the Royal Society of Victoria (Melbourne, Australia) on 8 August 1878.

In Australian English, "record player" was the term; "turntable" was a more technical term; "gramophone" was restricted to the old mechanical (i.e., wind-up) players; and "phonograph" was used as in British English. The "phonograph" was first demonstrated in Australia on 14 June 1878 to a meeting of the Royal Society of Victoria by the Society's Honorary Secretary, Alex Sutherland who published "The Sounds of the Consonants, as Indicated by the Phonograph" in the Society's journal in November that year.[11] On 8 August 1878 the phonograph was publicly demonstrated at the Society's annual conversazione, along with a range of other new inventions, including the microphone.[12]

Early history

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Phonautograph

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The phonautograph was invented on March 25, 1857, by Frenchman Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville,[13] an editor and typographer of manuscripts at a scientific publishing house in Paris.[14] One day while editing Professor Longet's Traité de Physiologie, he happened upon that customer's engraved illustration of the anatomy of the human ear, and conceived of "the imprudent idea of photographing the word." In 1853 or 1854 (Scott cited both years) he began working on "le problème de la parole s'écrivant elle-même" ("the problem of speech writing itself"), aiming to build a device that could replicate the function of the human ear.[14][15]

Dictionary illustration of a phonautograph. This version uses a barrel made of plaster of Paris.

Scott coated a plate of glass with a thin layer of lampblack. He then took an acoustic trumpet, and at its tapered end affixed a thin membrane that served as the analog to the eardrum. At the center of that membrane, he attached a rigid boar's bristle approximately a centimetre long, placed so that it just grazed the lampblack. As the glass plate was slid horizontally in a well formed groove at a speed of one meter per second, a person would speak into the trumpet, causing the membrane to vibrate and the stylus to trace figures[14] that were scratched into the lampblack.[16] On March 25, 1857, Scott received the French patent[17] #17,897/31,470 for his device, which he called a phonautograph.[18] The earliest known surviving recorded sound of a human voice was conducted on April 9, 1860, when Scott recorded[16] someone singing the song "Au Clair de la Lune" ("By the Light of the Moon") on the device.[19] However, the device was not designed to play back sounds,[16][20] as Scott intended for people to read back the tracings,[21] which he called phonautograms.[15] This was not the first time someone had used a device to create direct tracings of the vibrations of sound-producing objects, as tuning forks had been used in this way by English physicist Thomas Young in 1807.[22] By late 1857, with support from the Société d'encouragement pour l'industrie nationale, Scott's phonautograph was recording sounds with sufficient precision to be adopted by the scientific community, paving the way for the nascent science of acoustics.[15]

The device's true significance in the history of recorded sound was not fully realized prior to March 2008, when it was discovered and resurrected in a Paris patent office by First Sounds, an informal collaborative of American audio historians, recording engineers, and sound archivists founded to make the earliest sound recordings available to the public. The phonautograms were then digitally converted by scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, who were able to play back the recorded sounds, something Scott had never conceived of. Prior to this point, the earliest known record of a human voice was thought to be an 1877 phonograph recording by Thomas Edison.[16][23] The phonautograph would play a role in the development of the gramophone, whose inventor, Emile Berliner, worked with the phonautograph in the course of developing his own device.[24]

Paleophone

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Charles Cros, a French poet and amateur scientist, is the first person known to have made the conceptual leap from recording sound as a traced line to the theoretical possibility of reproducing the sound from the tracing and then to devising a definite method for accomplishing the reproduction. On April 30, 1877, he deposited a sealed envelope containing a summary of his ideas with the French Academy of Sciences, a standard procedure used by scientists and inventors to establish priority of conception of unpublished ideas in the event of any later dispute.[25]

An account of his invention was published on October 10, 1877, by which date Cros had devised a more direct procedure: the recording stylus could scribe its tracing through a thin coating of acid-resistant material on a metal surface and the surface could then be etched in an acid bath, producing the desired groove without the complication of an intermediate photographic procedure.[26] The author of this article called the device a phonographe, but Cros himself favored the word paleophone, sometimes rendered in French as voix du passé ('voice of the past').[27]

Cros was a poet of meager means, not in a position to pay a machinist to build a working model, and largely content to bequeath his ideas to the public domain free of charge and let others reduce them to practice, but after the earliest reports of Edison's presumably independent invention crossed the Atlantic he had his sealed letter of April 30 opened and read at the December 3, 1877 meeting of the French Academy of Sciences, claiming due scientific credit for priority of conception.[28]

Throughout the first decade (1890–1900) of commercial production of the earliest crude disc records, the direct acid-etch method first invented by Cros was used to create the metal master discs, but Cros was not around to claim any credit or to witness the humble beginnings of the eventually rich phonographic library he had foreseen. He had died in 1888 at the age of 45.[29]

The early phonographs

[edit]
Patent drawing for Edison's phonograph, May 18, 1880
Edison Resin cylinder phonograph, c. 1899

Thomas Edison conceived the principle of recording and reproducing sound between May and July 1877 as a byproduct of his efforts to "play back" recorded telegraph messages and to automate speech sounds for transmission by telephone.[30] His first experiments were with waxed paper.[31] He announced his invention of the first phonograph, a device for recording and replaying sound, on November 21, 1877 (early reports appear in Scientific American and several newspapers in the beginning of November, and an even earlier announcement of Edison working on a "talking-machine" can be found in the Chicago Daily Tribune on May 9[32]), and he demonstrated the device for the first time on November 29 (it was patented on February 19, 1878, as US Patent 200,521). "In December, 1877, a young man came into the office of the Scientific American, and placed before the editors a small, simple machine about which few preliminary remarks were offered. The visitor without any ceremony whatever turned the crank, and to the astonishment of all present the machine said: 'Good morning. How do you do? How do you like the phonograph?' The machine thus spoke for itself, and made known the fact that it was the phonograph..."[33]

Close up of the mechanism of an Edison Amberola, c. 1915

The music critic Herman Klein attended an early demonstration (1881–82) of a similar machine. On the early phonograph's reproductive capabilities he wrote in retrospect: "It sounded to my ear like someone singing about half a mile away, or talking at the other end of a big hall; but the effect was rather pleasant, save for a peculiar nasal quality wholly due to the mechanism, although there was little of the scratching that later was a prominent feature of the flat disc. Recording for that primitive machine was a comparatively simple matter. I had to keep my mouth about six inches away from the horn and remember not to make my voice too loud if I wanted anything approximating to a clear reproduction; that was all. When it was played over to me and I heard my own voice for the first time, one or two friends who were present said that it sounded rather like mine; others declared that they would never have recognised it. I daresay both opinions were correct."[34]

The Argus newspaper from Melbourne, Australia, reported on an 1878 demonstration at the Royal Society of Victoria, writing "There was a large attendance of ladies and gentlemen, who appeared greatly interested in the various scientific instruments exhibited. Among these the most interesting, perhaps, was the trial made by Mr. Sutherland with the phonograph, which was most amusing. Several trials were made, and were all more or less successful. 'Rule Britannia' was distinctly repeated, but great laughter was caused by the repetition of the convivial song of 'He's a jolly good fellow,' which sounded as if it was being sung by an old man of 80 with a cracked voice."[35]

Early machines

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Phonograph cabinet built with Edison cement, 1912. The clockwork portion of the phonograph is concealed in the base beneath the statue; the amplifying horn is the shell behind the human figure.

Edison's early phonographs recorded onto a thin sheet of metal, normally tinfoil, which was temporarily wrapped around a helically grooved cylinder mounted on a correspondingly threaded rod supported by plain and threaded bearings. While the cylinder was rotated and slowly progressed along its axis, the airborne sound vibrated a diaphragm connected to a stylus that indented the foil into the cylinder's groove, thereby recording the vibrations as "hill-and-dale" variations of the depth of the indentation.[36]

Introduction of the disc record

[edit]

By 1890, record manufacturers had begun using a rudimentary duplication process to mass-produce their product. While the live performers recorded the master phonograph, up to ten tubes led to blank cylinders in other phonographs. Until this development, each record had to be custom-made. Before long, a more advanced pantograph-based process made it possible to simultaneously produce 90–150 copies of each record. However, as demand for certain records grew, popular artists still needed to re-record and re-re-record their songs. Reportedly, the medium's first major African-American star George Washington Johnson was obliged to perform his "The Laughing Song" (or the separate "The Whistling Coon")[37] up to thousands of times in a studio during his recording career. Sometimes he would sing "The Laughing Song" more than fifty times in a day, at twenty cents per rendition. (The average price of a single cylinder in the mid-1890s was about fifty cents.)[citation needed]

Oldest surviving recordings

[edit]
Early phonograph at Deaf Smith County Historical Museum in Hereford, Texas

Lambert's lead cylinder recording for an experimental talking clock is often identified as the oldest surviving playable sound recording,[38] although the evidence advanced for its early date is controversial.[39] Wax phonograph cylinder recordings of Handel's choral music made on June 29, 1888, at The Crystal Palace in London were thought to be the oldest-known surviving musical recordings,[40] until the recent playback by a group of American historians of a phonautograph recording of Au clair de la lune recorded on April 9, 1860.[41]

The 1860 phonautogram had not until then been played, as it was only a transcription of sound waves into graphic form on paper for visual study. Recently developed optical scanning and image processing techniques have given new life to early recordings by making it possible to play unusually delicate or physically unplayable media without physical contact.[42]

A recording made on a sheet of tinfoil at an 1878 demonstration of Edison's phonograph in St. Louis, Missouri, has been played back by optical scanning and digital analysis. A few other early tinfoil recordings are known to survive, including a slightly earlier one that is believed to preserve the voice of U.S. President Rutherford B. Hayes, but as of May 2014 they have not yet been scanned.[clarification needed] These antique tinfoil recordings, which have typically been stored folded, are too fragile to be played back with a stylus without seriously damaging them. Edison's 1877 tinfoil recording of Mary Had a Little Lamb, not preserved, has been called the first instance of recorded verse.[43]

On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the phonograph, Edison recounted reciting Mary Had a Little Lamb to test his first machine. The 1927 event was filmed by an early sound-on-film newsreel camera, and an audio clip from that film's soundtrack is sometimes mistakenly presented as the original 1877 recording.[44] Wax cylinder recordings made by 19th-century media legends such as P. T. Barnum and Shakespearean actor Edwin Booth are amongst the earliest verified recordings by the famous that have survived to the present.[45][46]

Improvements at the Volta Laboratory

[edit]

Alexander Graham Bell and his two associates took Edison's tinfoil phonograph and modified it considerably to make it reproduce sound from wax instead of tinfoil. They began their work at Bell's Volta Laboratory in Washington, D. C., in 1879, and continued until they were granted basic patents in 1886 for recording in wax.[47]

Although Edison had invented the phonograph in 1877, the fame bestowed on him for this invention was not due to its efficiency. Recording with his tinfoil phonograph was too difficult to be practical, as the tinfoil tore easily, and even when the stylus was properly adjusted, its reproduction of sound was distorted, and good for only a few playbacks; nevertheless Edison had discovered the idea of sound recording. However immediately after his discovery he did not improve it, allegedly because of an agreement to spend the next five years developing the New York City electric light and power system.[47]

Volta's early challenge

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Meanwhile, Bell, a scientist and experimenter at heart, was looking for new worlds to conquer after having patented the telephone. According to Sumner Tainter, it was through Gardiner Green Hubbard that Bell took up the phonograph challenge. Bell had married Hubbard's daughter Mabel in 1879 while Hubbard was president of the Edison Speaking Phonograph Co., and his organization, which had purchased the Edison patent, was financially troubled because people did not want to buy a machine that seldom worked well and proved difficult for the average person to operate.[47]

Volta Graphophone

[edit]
A 'G' (Graham Bell) model Graphophone being played back by a typist after its cylinder had recorded dictation.

The sound vibrations had been indented in the wax that had been applied to the Edison phonograph. The following was the text of one of their recordings: "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamed of in your philosophy. I am a Graphophone and my mother was a phonograph."[48] Most of the disc machines designed at the Volta Lab had their disc mounted on vertical turntables. The explanation is that in the early experiments, the turntable, with disc, was mounted on the shop lathe, along with the recording and reproducing heads. Later, when the complete models were built, most of them featured vertical turntables.[47]

One interesting exception was a horizontal seven inch turntable. The machine, although made in 1886, was a duplicate of one made earlier but taken to Europe by Chichester Bell. Tainter was granted U.S. patent 385,886 on July 10, 1888. The playing arm is rigid, except for a pivoted vertical motion of 90 degrees to allow removal of the record or a return to starting position. While recording or playing, the record not only rotated, but moved laterally under the stylus, which thus described a spiral, recording 150 grooves to the inch.[47]

The basic distinction between the Edison's first phonograph patent and the Bell and Tainter patent of 1886 was the method of recording. Edison's method was to indent the sound waves on a piece of tin foil, while Bell and Tainter's invention called for cutting, or "engraving", the sound waves into a wax record with a sharp recording stylus.[47]

Graphophone commercialization

[edit]
A later-model Columbia Graphophone of 1901
Edison-Phonograph playing: Iola by the Edison Military Band (video, 3 min 51 s)

In 1885, when the Volta Associates were sure that they had a number of practical inventions, they filed patent applications and began to seek out investors. The Volta Graphophone Company of Alexandria, Virginia, was created on January 6, 1886, and incorporated on February 3, 1886. It was formed to control the patents and to handle the commercial development of their sound recording and reproduction inventions, one of which became the first Dictaphone.[47]

After the Volta Associates gave several demonstrations in the City of Washington, businessmen from Philadelphia created the American Graphophone Company on March 28, 1887, in order to produce and sell the machines for the budding phonograph marketplace.[49] The Volta Graphophone Company then merged with American Graphophone,[49] which itself later evolved into Columbia Records.[50][51]

A coin-operated version of the Graphophone, U.S. patent 506,348, was developed by Tainter in 1893 to compete with nickel-in-the-slot entertainment phonograph U.S. patent 428,750 demonstrated in 1889 by Louis T. Glass, manager of the Pacific Phonograph Company.[52]

The work of the Volta Associates laid the foundation for the successful use of dictating machines in business, because their wax recording process was practical and their machines were durable. But it would take several more years and the renewed efforts of Edison and the further improvements of Emile Berliner and many others, before the recording industry became a major factor in home entertainment.[47]

The technology quickly became popular abroad, where it was also used in new ways. In 1895, for example, Hungary became the first country to use phonographs to conduct folklore and ethnomusicological research, after which it became common practice in ethnography.[53]

Disc vs. cylinder as a recording medium

[edit]

Discs are not inherently better than cylinders at providing audio fidelity. Rather, the advantages of the format are seen in the manufacturing process: discs can be stamped, and the matrixes to stamp disc can be shipped to other printing plants for a global distribution of recordings; cylinders could not be stamped until 1901–1902, when the gold moulding process was introduced by Edison.[54]

A Victor V phonograph, circa 1907

Through experimentation, in 1892, Berliner began commercial production of his disc records and "gramophones". His "phonograph record" was the first disc record to be offered to the public. They were five inches (13 cm) in diameter and recorded on one side only. Seven-inch (17.5 cm) records followed in 1895. The same year, Berliner replaced the hard rubber used to make the discs with a shellac compound.[55] Berliner's early records had poor sound quality, however. Work by Eldridge R. Johnson eventually improved the sound fidelity to a point where it was as good as the cylinder.[56][when?]

Wax cylinders would continue to be used into the 1920s, with New York City-based Czech immigrant, businessman, and inventor Alois Benjamin Saliger using cylinders for his "Psycho-Phone" or "Psychophone", a specialized phonograph or gramophone that Saliger intended to be used in the field of psychology. Invented in 1927 for sleep learning, the Psychophone featured a clock mounted on top of a phonograph, with a repeater device for rewinding and continuously replaying records. While Edison machines had a spring-powered motor, powered by crank on the side, Psychophone models featured an electric-powered motor. Saliger patented the device in 1932 as the "automatic time-controlled suggestion machine".[57][58]

Dominance of the disc record

[edit]
A 1930s portable wind-up gramophone from The Gramophone Company

In the 1930s, vinyl (originally known as vinylite) was introduced as a record material for radio transcription discs, and for radio commercials. At that time, virtually no discs for home use were made from this material. Vinyl was used for the popular 78-rpm V-discs issued to US soldiers during World War II. This significantly reduced breakage during transport. The first commercial vinylite record was the set of five 12" discs "Prince Igor" (Asch Records album S-800, dubbed from Soviet masters in 1945). Victor began selling some home-use vinyl 78s in late 1945; but most 78s were made of a shellac compound until the 78-rpm format was completely phased out. (Shellac records were heavier and more brittle.) 33s and 45s were, however, made exclusively of vinyl, with the exception of some 45s manufactured out of polystyrene.[59]

First all-transistor phonograph

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Philco all-transistor model TPA-1 phonograph, developed and produced in 1955
Philco all-transistor model TPA-1 phonograph – Radio and Television News magazine, issue October 1955

In 1955, Philco developed and produced the world's first all-transistor phonograph models TPA-1 and TPA-2, which were announced in the June 28, 1955 edition of The Wall Street Journal.[60] Philco started to sell these all-transistor phonographs in the fall of 1955, for the price of $59.95. The October 1955 issue of Radio & Television News magazine (page 41), had a full page detailed article on Philco's new consumer product. The all-transistor portable phonograph TPA-1 and TPA-2 models played only 45rpm records and used four 1.5 volt "D" batteries for their power supply. The "TPA" stands for "Transistor Phonograph Amplifier". Their circuitry used three Philco germanium PNP alloy-fused junction audio frequency transistors. After the 1956 season had ended, Philco decided to discontinue both models, for transistors were too expensive compared to vacuum tubes,[61][62] but by 1961 a $49.95 ($525.59 in 2024) portable, battery-powered radio-phonograph with seven transistors was available.[63]

Turntable designs

[edit]
A Technics SL-1200 direct-drive turntable

There are presently three main phonograph designs: belt-drive, direct-drive, and idler-wheel.

In a belt-drive turntable the motor is located off-center from the platter, either underneath it or entirely outside of it, and is connected to the platter or counter-platter by a drive belt made from elastomeric material.

The direct-drive turntable was invented by Shuichi Obata, an engineer at Matsushita (now Panasonic).[64] In 1969, Matsushita released it as the Technics SP-10,[65] the first direct-drive turntable on the market.[66] The most influential direct-drive turntable was the Technics SL-1200,[67] which, following the spread of turntablism in hip hop culture, became the most widely used turntable in DJ culture for several decades.[67]

Arm systems

[edit]
An SME 3012 tonearm fitted on a Thorens TD124 MkII turntable

In some high quality equipment, the arm carrying the pickup, known as a tonearm, is manufactured separately from the motor and turntable unit. Companies specialising in the manufacture of tonearms include the English company SME.

Cue lever

[edit]

More sophisticated turntables were (and still are) frequently manufactured so as to incorporate a "cue lever", a device that mechanically lowers the tonearm on to the record. It enables the user to locate an individual track more easily, to pause a record, and to avoid the risk of scratching the record, which may require practice to avoid when lowering the tonearm manually.[68]

Linear tracking

[edit]

Early developments in linear turntables were from Rek-O-Kut (portable lathe/phonograph) and Ortho-Sonic in the 1950s, and Acoustical in the early 1960s. These were eclipsed by more successful implementations of the concept from the late 1960s through the early 1980s.[69]

A typical modern turntable, showing the curved tonearm with a headshell at the end, under which lies the magnetic cartridge and its attached stylus touching down on the grooves of a black record placed on the turntable's platter

Pickup systems

[edit]
Typical magnetic cartridge

The pickup, or cartridge, is a transducer that converts mechanical vibrations from a stylus into an electrical signal. The electrical signal is amplified and converted into sound by one or more loudspeakers. Crystal and ceramic pickups that use the piezoelectric effect have largely been replaced by magnetic cartridges.

The pickup includes a stylus with a small diamond or sapphire tip that runs in the record groove. The stylus eventually becomes worn by contact with the groove, and it is usually replaceable.

Styli are classified as spherical or elliptical, although the tip is actually shaped as a half-sphere or a half-ellipsoid. Spherical styli are generally more robust than other types, but do not follow the groove as accurately, giving diminished high frequency response. Elliptical styli usually track the groove more accurately, with increased high frequency response and less distortion. For DJ use, the relative robustness of spherical styli make them generally preferred for back-cuing and scratching. There are a number of derivations of the basic elliptical type, including the Shibata or fine line stylus, which can more accurately reproduce high frequency information contained in the record groove. This is especially important for playback of quadraphonic recordings.[70]

Optical readout

[edit]

A few specialist laser turntables read the groove optically using a laser pickup. Since there is no physical contact with the record, no wear is incurred. However, this advantage is debatable, since vinyl records have been tested to withstand even 1200 plays with no significant audio degradation, provided that it is played with a high-quality cartridge and that the surfaces are clean.[71] The disadvantage of the laser turntable is that the record must be extremely clean, lest the laser audibly "play" surface dust and debris that would normally be pushed aside by a mechanical stylus.

An alternative approach is to take a high-resolution photograph or scan of each side of the record and interpret the image of the grooves using computer software. An amateur attempt using a flatbed scanner lacked satisfactory fidelity.[72] A professional system employed by the Library of Congress produces excellent quality.[73] The system has the potential to recover and reconstruct recordings from fragile shellac discs that have broken into pieces.

Stylus

[edit]
Stylus for jukebox using shellac 78 rpm records, 1940s

A development in stylus form came about by the attention to the CD-4 quadraphonic sound modulation process, which requires up to 50 kHz frequency response, with cartridges like Technics EPC-100CMK4 capable of playback on frequencies up to 100 kHz. This requires a stylus with a narrow side radius, such as 5 micrometres (0.2 mils). A narrow-profile elliptical stylus is able to read the higher frequencies (greater than 20 kHz), but at an increased wear, since the contact surface is narrower. For overcoming this problem, the Shibata stylus was invented around 1972 in Japan by Norio Shibata of JVC.[74]

The Shibata-designed stylus offers a greater contact surface with the groove, which in turn means less pressure over the vinyl surface and thus less wear. A positive side effect is that the greater contact surface also means the stylus reads sections of the vinyl that were not worn by the common spherical stylus. In a demonstration by JVC records worn after 500 plays at a relatively high 4.5 g tracking force with a spherical stylus, played perfectly with the Shibata profile.[75]

Other advanced stylus shapes appeared following the same goal of increasing contact surface, improving on the Shibata. Chronologically: "Hughes" Shibata variant (1975),[76] "Ogura" (1978),[77] Van den Hul (1982).[78] Such a stylus may be marketed as "Hyperelliptical" (Shure), "Alliptic", "Fine Line" (Ortofon), "Line contact" (Audio Technica), "Polyhedron", "LAC", or "Stereohedron" (Stanton).[79]

A keel-shaped diamond stylus appeared as a byproduct of the invention of the CED Videodisc. This, together with laser-diamond-cutting technologies, made possible the "ridge" shaped stylus, such as the Namiki (1985)[80] design, and Fritz Gyger (1989)[81] design. This type of stylus is marketed as "MicroLine" (Audio technica), "Micro-Ridge" (Shure), or "Replicant" (Ortofon).[79]

To address the problem of steel needle wear upon records, which resulted in the cracking of the latter, RCA Victor devised unbreakable records in 1930, by mixing polyvinyl chloride with plasticisers, in a proprietary formula they called Victrolac, which was first used in 1931, in motion picture discs.[82]

Equalization

[edit]

Since the late 1950s, almost all phono input stages have used the RIAA equalization standard. Before settling on that standard, there were many different equalizations in use, including EMI, His Master's Voice, Columbia, Decca FFRR, NAB, Ortho, BBC transcription, etc. Recordings made using these other equalization schemes typically sound odd if they are played through a RIAA-equalized preamplifier called a "phono stage". High-performance (so-called "multicurve disc") phono stages, which include multiple, selectable equalizations, are no longer commonly available. However, some vintage phono stages, such as the LEAK varislope series, are still obtainable and can be refurbished. Newer phono stages like the Esoteric Sound Re-Equalizer or the K-A-B MK2 Vintage Signal Processor are also available.[83]

Contemporary use and models

[edit]
An old phonograph for record preservation at Fonoteca Nacional [es] (National Sound Archive of Mexico)

Although largely replaced since the introduction of the compact disc in 1982, record albums still sold in small numbers throughout the 1980s and 1990s, but gradually sidelined in favor of CD players and tape decks in home audio environments.[84] Record players continued to be manufactured and sold into the 21st century, although in small numbers and mainly for DJs.[85] Following a resurgence in sales of records since the late 2000s,[86][87] an increasing number of turntables have been manufactured and sold.[88] Notably, Japanese company Panasonic brought back its well-known advanced Technics SL-1200 at the 2016 Consumer Electronics Show[89] during which Sony also headlined a turntable, amid increasing interest in the format.[90] Similarly, Audio-Technica revived its 1980s Sound Burger portable player in 2023.[91]

A Crosley retro-styled suitcase record player produced in c. 2013

At the low-end of the market, Crosley has been especially popular with its suitcase record players[92] and have played a big part in the vinyl revival and its adoption among younger people and children in the 2010s.[93]

A mid-range Yamaha turntable, c. 2019

New interest in records has led to the development of turntables with additional modern features. USB turntables have a built-in audio interface, which transfers the analog sound directly to the connected computer.[94] Some USB turntables transfer the audio without equalization, but are sold with software that allows the EQ of the transferred audio file to be adjusted. There are also many turntables on the market designed to be plugged into a computer via a USB port for needle dropping purposes.[95]

Modern turntables have also been released featuring Bluetooth technology to output a record's sound wirelessly through speakers.[90] Sony have also released a high-end turntable with an analog-to-digital converter to convert the sound from a playing record into a 24-bit high-resolution audio file in DSD or WAV formats.[96]

See also

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The phonograph is a device invented by Thomas Edison in 1877 that records and reproduces sound by capturing audio vibrations on a rotating cylinder wrapped in tinfoil using a stylus attached to a diaphragm. The original model featured a grooved metal cylinder mounted on a shaft with a hand crank for rotation, allowing the stylus to etch indentations corresponding to sound waves, which could then be replayed by tracing the grooves to vibrate the diaphragm and produce audible sound. On its first demonstration, Edison recited "Mary Had a Little Lamb," marking the initial successful recording and playback of human speech. Edison regarded the phonograph as his favorite invention, envisioning applications beyond entertainment, such as dictating letters, recording books for the blind, preserving the voices of the dying, and even enabling dolls to speak or sing. Despite initial challenges with the fragile tinfoil medium, which limited recording duration to about two minutes, the device revolutionized sound technology and laid the foundation for the recording industry. Early commercial models, marketed as novelties or business tools, evolved into more durable versions using wax cylinders by the 1880s, improving sound quality and longevity. The phonograph's impact extended to music and culture, transforming how audio was preserved and shared, though it faced competition from later inventions like Emile Berliner's flat disc gramophone in 1887. By the late , enhanced models such as the 1899 Edison Concert Phonograph featured larger, louder cylinders measuring 4.25 inches long and 5 inches in diameter, retailing for professional and home use. Its legacy endures as the precursor to modern audio recording technologies, influencing everything from vinyl records to .

Terminology

Regional Variations

The term "phonograph" was applied by in 1877 to his invention, the first practical device capable of both recording and reproducing sound using a tinfoil-wrapped . The name derives from roots phōnē, meaning "sound" or "voice," and graphē, meaning "writing" or "recording," highlighting the device's function in inscribing audible vibrations. In the United States, "phonograph" originally denoted Edison's cylinder-based machines but gradually encompassed disc record players as they gained popularity after the 1890s, while "gramophone"—coined by in for his flat-disc playback system—remained a more specific term for disc-only devices in technical and contexts. This broad application of "phonograph" persisted in American usage into the , often serving as a generic label for any analog sound reproducer. In and other English-speaking Commonwealth regions, such as the and , "phonograph" was commonly used in the late for early cylinder recorders, reflecting the initial importation of Edison's technology. However, with the rise of disc-based systems around 1900, "gramophone" became the preferred term for these machines, aligning with British commercial influences like ; by the 1920s, everyday language increasingly favored neutral descriptors like "record player" for both and disc devices.

Evolution of Terms

The term "phonograph" originated with Thomas Edison's 1877 invention, a device that recorded and reproduced sound on tinfoil-wrapped cylinders, derived from Greek roots meaning "sound-writing." This term dominated descriptions of cylinder-based recorders through the 1880s and into the 1890s, initially focused on dictation but increasingly adapted for entertainment. In 1886, Alexander Graham Bell's Volta Laboratory team introduced the "Graphophone" as a patented improvement, using wax-coated cylinders for clearer recordings and marketed as a superior alternative for business and home use. From the late 1880s, challenged cylinder dominance with his "gramophone," patented in 1887, which employed flat discs with lateral grooves for easier and playback, shifting emphasis toward over dictation. By the 1890s, "gramophone" gained popularity, particularly outside the U.S., while "phonograph" remained the generic American term encompassing various cylinder and early disc machines. In 1906, the trademarked "Victrola" for its enclosed, internal-horn disc phonographs, popularizing cabinet-style players in middle-class homes and further diversifying branded terminology amid growing commercial competition. In the post-1920s electrical recording era, terminology broadened with the integration of amplifiers and electric motors, leading to "record player" and "turntable" as common descriptors for disc-based systems, reflecting their role in setups. "Phonograph" gradually declined in everyday use, supplanted by "stereophonic record player" by the as two-channel became standard, emphasizing enhanced spatial sound reproduction. Into the late 20th and 21st centuries, "phonograph" experienced a revival in communities, often denoting high-fidelity vinyl playback systems prized for analog warmth amid the digital music surge and vinyl resurgence.

Historical Development

Invention and Early Prototypes

The of the phonograph built upon earlier attempts to capture visually rather than reproduce it audibly. In 1857, French inventor Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville developed the , a device that used a vibrating diaphragm and to trace waves onto soot-covered paper or glass, creating phonautograms for graphical analysis of acoustic phenomena. The phonautograph did not include a playback mechanism, as Scott intended it solely for scientific visualization of speech and waveforms; the earliest known phonautogram recording dates to 1860. In the same year as Edison's breakthrough, French poet and inventor independently conceived a sound reproduction system. On April 30, 1877, Cros submitted a description of his "paleophone" to the , proposing a disc coated with a soft material like lampblack that could be etched with sound vibrations and then replayed using a needle to vibrate a diaphragm. Although Cros's design was theoretical and disc-based—predating Edison's by months—it was never constructed due to lack of funding and priority given to his sealed memorandum. The practical phonograph emerged from Thomas Edison's laboratory in Menlo Park, . On December 6, 1877, after sketching the design on November 29 and having machinist John Kruesi build a in about 30 hours, Edison successfully recorded and played back his recitation of the "" using a tinfoil-wrapped metal cylinder, a hand-cranked shaft, and diaphragm-needle units for both recording and reproduction. Edison filed a patent application for the device on December 24, 1877, which was granted as U.S. Patent No. 200,521 on February 19, 1878, marking the first invention capable of both recording and audible playback of sound. Edison coined the term "phonograph" to describe his machine, derived from Greek roots meaning "sound writing." These early prototypes suffered from significant limitations that restricted their utility. Sound quality was poor, with faint, marred by and the inability to capture certain syllables clearly, as the tinfoil medium deformed easily after just a few playbacks. Recordings were limited to short durations of about one to two minutes per cylinder due to the fixed size and manual cranking speed, which required constant operator adjustment to maintain consistent rotation. The hand-crank mechanism further compounded issues, as uneven speed led to variable pitch and additional distortion.

Key Improvements and Commercialization

Following the initial invention of the phonograph, researchers at the Volta Laboratory in , made significant advancements in recording technology during the . Established in 1880 by , his cousin , and using funds from Bell's patent award, the laboratory focused on improving Edison's tinfoil-based design. By 1881, they introduced lateral-cut grooves—where the stylus moved side-to-side rather than up-and-down—to enhance sound fidelity and durability over Edison's vertical method. These efforts culminated in the Graphophone, patented in (U.S. 341,214), which utilized wax-coated paper for superior recording quality and reusability. The wax material, initially a mixture of and and later refined with ozocerite, allowed for clearer playback and multiple replays without significant degradation. A key innovation was extending playback duration; early prototypes achieved up to 5 minutes per 6-inch , far surpassing Edison's original 2-minute tinfoil limit, making it practical for dictation and short speeches. Bell faced legal hurdles in commercializing these improvements, including patent disputes with Edison starting in the mid-1880s. Tainter and the Bells filed suit in 1887 over Edison's wax cylinder designs, which infringed on their lateral groove and wax formulation patents; the case was settled in 1890 with Edison licensing the technology. To address the hand-crank limitations of early models, the Volta team developed spring-driven and electric motors by 1888, enabling consistent playback speeds and hands-free operation (U.S. Patent 375,579). Commercialization accelerated with the formation of the Edison Phonograph Company on October 8, 1887, to manufacture and market improved wax-cylinder machines. The North American Phonograph Company, established on July 14, 1888, by financier Jesse H. Lippincott, consolidated regional licensees and focused on leasing devices primarily for office dictation, with machines priced around $150 and cylinders at about 50 cents each for purchase or rental. The Volta Graphophone Company, founded January 6, 1886, similarly marketed the Graphophone for business use, emphasizing its reliability for stenography. Initially targeted at professional applications like , the phonograph's market shifted toward by the early as prerecorded cylinders of and became available, broadening consumer appeal. A notable early public showcase occurred in at London's during the Handel Festival, where an Edison phonograph recorded a chorus of 4,000 voices performing excerpts from , demonstrating its potential for capturing live performances over distances up to 100 yards.

Transition to Disc Records

The transition from cylinder-based phonographs to flat disc records marked a pivotal evolution in sound recording technology, driven primarily by Emile Berliner's invention of the gramophone. In 1887, Berliner, a German-born inventor based in , patented his gramophone system (U.S. Patent No. 372,786, granted November 8, 1887), which utilized flat discs—initially made of zinc, later —with laterally cut grooves to record and reproduce sound vibrations. Unlike Thomas Edison's vertical-cut (hill-and-dale) cylinders, Berliner's lateral method etched undulations into the sides of a spiral groove on a rotating disc, allowing for a more stable playback mechanism without the need for a feed screw. The Berliner Gramophone Company began producing the first commercial disc records in 1895, starting with 7-inch single-sided discs that played for about two minutes, distributed initially in the United States and . The disc format offered several key advantages over cylinders, accelerating its adoption. was simplified through a stamping process: a master disc was etched, electroplated to create a negative mold (stamper), and used to press multiple copies in a single operation, drastically reducing costs and enabling large-scale manufacturing—unlike cylinders, which required individual molding and were prone to breakage. Discs were also more durable, easier to store by stacking, and capable of longer playback times; by 1910, 12-inch discs achieved up to five minutes per side, compared to the typical two to four minutes of standard cylinders. These efficiencies made discs more appealing for commercial distribution and consumer use, shifting the industry toward a format better suited for widespread entertainment rather than Edison's original focus on dictation and short business recordings. Industry adoption gained momentum in the early 1900s, with major players transitioning to discs. The United States Gramophone Company, formed in 1893 to market Berliner's invention, laid the groundwork, but Eldridge R. Johnson's Victor Talking Machine Company, established in 1901, propelled discs to dominance by introducing high-quality spring-motor gramophones and the premium Red Seal label for classical recordings, featuring artists like Enrico Caruso. The Columbia Phonograph Company, previously a cylinder manufacturer, entered the disc market in 1902 and expanded aggressively by 1906, offering competitive 10-inch and 12-inch records. By 1912, even Edison's National Phonograph Company ceased production of new cylinder recordings, effectively phasing out the format as discs captured over 90% of the market. This shift was not without conflict, as legal battles between Berliner and Edison's company challenged the gramophone's viability. These rulings validated discs as a distinct , enabling Berliner's licensees to expand production and ultimately supplanting cylinders as the standard medium.

Oldest Surviving Examples

The earliest surviving sound recordings, predating the phonograph, are the phonautograms created by French inventor Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville using his device, which visually traced sound waves on soot-covered paper or glass without playback capability. These include a 1860 recording of the French folk song "," captured as an optical waveform, which was first converted to audible sound in 2008 by the First Sounds collaborative using digital scanning and techniques. Other Scott phonautograms from 1857 to 1861, such as those of spoken French and tuning forks, were similarly recovered, providing the oldest verifiable human voices and music preserved from the mid-19th century. The oldest surviving playable phonograph recording is an 1878 tinfoil cylinder from Thomas Edison's invention, known as the "St. Louis tinfoil," which features a cornet solo followed by a recitation of "" and "." This 78-second artifact, made during a demonstration in , , was recovered and played in 2012 through advanced 3D imaging and virtual stylus reconstruction at , marking the earliest audible American phonograph example after Edison's 1877 prototype tests. Among early cylinder recordings, the Graphophone—an improved wax-based phonograph developed by and at the Volta Laboratory—produced preserved demos from 1888 onward, including experimental dictations and musical tests held in the collections. These Graphophone cylinders represent some of the first commercially viable multi-use recordings, with examples demonstrating speech and instrumentation from Bell's laboratory trials. By 1890, celebrity recordings emerged, such as poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson's recitations of his own works like "The " on wax cylinders, preserved in institutions including the . Preservation of these artifacts faces significant challenges due to material degradation, including tinfoil's tendency to tear and crumple from handling, and wax cylinders' vulnerability to cracking, mold growth, and chemical breakdown from environmental factors like and fluctuations. Modern digitization efforts employ non-contact optical scanning technologies, such as the Library of Congress's IRENE system, which uses high-resolution to map groove patterns and reconstruct audio without physical playback, thereby mitigating further damage while enabling global access to these fragile historical sounds.

Recording Mediums

Cylinder Phonographs

Cylinder phonographs utilized rotating as the recording medium, typically made of or later , with standard diameters ranging from 2 to 2.25 inches and lengths of about 4.25 inches. These featured helical grooves cut in a vertical or "hill-and-dale" pattern, with densities of 100 grooves per inch for two-minute recordings and up to 200 grooves per inch for longer variants, enabling sound storage through lateral variations in groove width or vertical undulations. Playback speeds varied from 90 to 160 , depending on the cylinder type and era, to accommodate different recording durations and pitch consistency. The playback mechanism centered on a mandrel, a tapered metal shaft that securely held the cylinder during rotation, driven by a hand-cranked mechanism in early models. A reproducer assembly, consisting of a lightweight stylus attached to a diaphragm, traced the groove's vibrations, converting mechanical movements into acoustic sound waves amplified through an external horn. This design allowed for both recording and reproduction on the same device, with the stylus capturing or replaying undulations as the cylinder turned. Early commercialization efforts, such as Edison's phonographs from the 1890s, relied on this acoustic setup without electrical components. Key variants included Edison's Amberol cylinders introduced in 1908, which used indestructible black wax with doubled groove density to achieve four minutes of playback time, significantly extending content capacity over prior two-minute brown wax cylinders. Later Blue Amberol cylinders shifted to for greater durability. In , produced vertical-cut cylinders, employing a groove modulation perpendicular to the surface for enhanced , remaining in use particularly in through the 1920s alongside their disc innovations. Production of cylinder phonographs was predominantly hand-cranked with horn amplification for acoustic output, reflecting the era's mechanical simplicity. By , the U.S. industry had manufactured an estimated 10 million cumulatively since the , peaking around 1903 before the rise of disc formats, with Edison's Gold Moulded process enabling efficient .

Disc Phonographs

Disc phonographs employed flat, rotating discs with spiral grooves to capture and replay audio signals through mechanical or electrical means, establishing a scalable format that superseded cylinders by the early due to easier and playback. These devices featured a turntable driven by hand-crank or motor, a tracing the groove to vibrate a diaphragm or , and an acoustic horn or electrical amplifier for sound output. Early disc formats centered on shellac-based 78 rpm records, which dominated from the through the and typically measured 10 inches in , offering 3-5 minutes of playback per side depending on groove spacing and content. In 1948, introduced the vinyl long-playing ( at 33⅓ rpm, utilizing a 12-inch to achieve over 20 minutes per side, enabling extended album formats without interruption. RCA Victor followed in 1949 with the 45 rpm single, a 7-inch vinyl disc designed for shorter tracks of about 3-4 minutes per side, targeting popular music distribution. Most disc phonographs used lateral grooves, where the stylus moved side-to-side to encode audio vibrations, as pioneered by in his 1887 gramophone patent. An exception appeared in early discs from 1905, which employed vertical grooves for depth-based modulation to reduce surface noise, though this system required specialized reproducers and faded by the 1920s. Long-playing records adopted microgroove technology with a groove width of approximately 0.001 inches, allowing denser packing for longer playtimes while maintaining compatibility with finer styli. Manufacturing began with cutting a master lacquer disc using a recording lathe to inscribe the audio groove, followed by electroplating to create durable metal stampers for pressing replicas in shellac or vinyl. This process enabled mass production by the 1920s, reducing costs to around $1 per disc and broadening consumer access through high-volume replication. During the acoustic era before 1925, disc phonographs were hand-cranked, relying on mechanical linkage from the stylus to a diaphragm within an exponential horn for acoustic amplification, which limited fidelity to mid-range frequencies. The introduction of electrical recording in 1925 by Columbia and Victor Records marked a pivotal advance, using microphones and amplifiers to capture a wider tonal range and improve overall sound fidelity on discs.

Comparative Advantages and Decline

The cylinder phonograph, while innovative, suffered from several technical and economic drawbacks that hindered its scalability. Duplication was labor-intensive and costly, relying on one-off molding processes for wax cylinders, in contrast to the efficient stamping of metal masters for discs. Cylinders were also inherently fragile, prone to cracking and brittleness due to their material composition of wax or , which exacerbated handling and issues. Storage posed further challenges, as cylinders' cylindrical shape prevented easy stacking, leading to inefficient space use compared to flat discs. Overall production reflected these limitations, with an estimated hundreds of millions of cylinders manufactured globally from the late to the , primarily by major producers like Edison and , versus billions of discs produced over the subsequent decades. Disc phonographs, conversely, offered decisive advantages that propelled their dominance. Their flat, stackable design facilitated compact storage and simpler shipping, while replication via metal stamping from etched masters was far cheaper and faster than pouring individual cylinders. These efficiencies reduced costs and enabled , allowing companies like Victor to outpace cylinder makers. By 1910, discs had captured the majority of the , as sales of disc players and surpassed cylinder systems, driven by lower prices and broader availability. The decline of mechanical phonographs accelerated in the due to technological and cultural shifts. The introduction of electrical recording in 1925, using microphones and amplifiers for higher fidelity, revitalized the industry but highlighted the limitations of purely acoustic mechanical systems. Simultaneously, the rise of in the early 1920s provided free access to , eroding demand for phonograph purchases and contributing to a sharp sales drop. The transition to electronic amplification marked a pivotal shift, exemplified by the TPA-1 in 1955, the world's first all-transistor portable phonograph, which eliminated vacuum tubes and enabled compact, battery-powered designs. By the 1980s, mechanical phonographs reached full obsolescence as cassettes offered portability and affordability, followed by compact discs providing superior durability and skip resistance, rendering analog mechanical playback largely obsolete for mainstream use. Despite their decline, cylinder phonographs persist in niche collector markets today, where enthusiasts trade and restore machines and records through auctions and specialized forums, valuing their and acoustic charm.

Mechanical Components

Turntable and Drive Mechanisms

The turntable platter serves as the rotating platform that holds the phonograph record during playback, typically measuring 12 inches in to accommodate long-playing (LP) records. Constructed from materials such as aluminum or , the platter is often weighted to enhance rotational stability and minimize vibrations that could affect sound fidelity. Aluminum platters, common in mid-20th-century designs, provide a balance of and , while variants offer superior flatness and in some high-end models. Drive mechanisms transfer power from the motor to the platter, with several types developed over time to optimize speed consistency and isolation. Belt-drive systems, prevalent in high-fidelity turntables since the , employ a rubber belt to connect the motor to the platter's rim or sub-platter, effectively isolating motor vibrations and reducing audible rumble. In contrast, idler-wheel drives, popularized in the for their quick start-up times, use a rubber-tired pressed against the platter's underside to transmit from the motor, though they can introduce more mechanical due to direct contact. Rim-drive variants, a subset of idler systems, apply force to the platter's outer edge for similar high-torque performance in broadcast-era models. The shift to direct-drive mechanisms, pioneered by Technics engineer Shuichi Obata with the SP-10 model in 1969, integrates the motor directly beneath the platter, eliminating intermediary components and achieving lower rumble levels through precise . Synchronous AC motors, introduced in phonographs during the , provided constant rotational speed tied to the electrical grid's , marking a key advancement over spring-wound mechanisms. These motors ensured steady playback without manual intervention, aligning with the era's standardization efforts for RPM shellac discs. Speed regulation further evolved with mechanical governors in early electric models to maintain nominal rates of , 45, and RPM, established as industry standards by the mid-20th century to accommodate varying record formats. Modern and high-end units incorporate quartz-locked controls, introduced in the alongside direct-drive , which use crystal oscillators for feedback to achieve wow and flutter variations of ±0.1% or better, preserving pitch accuracy during playback. Historically, phonograph drives transitioned from manual crank mechanisms, reliant on user-wound springs, to electric motors in the , enabling reliable operation without constant attendance and supporting the rise of electrical recording techniques. This electrification, beginning with options like the 1913 Victrola XVI, facilitated broader consumer adoption by the decade's end, paving the way for refined drive systems that integrated seamlessly with tonearms for consistent groove tracking.

Tonearm and Tracking Systems

The tonearm serves as the mechanical linkage that guides the across the phonograph record's grooves, ensuring precise tracking while minimizing wear and distortion. Traditional designs feature a pivoted arm, either in an S-shaped or straight configuration, mounted on a single pivot point near the base to allow radial movement over the record surface. A at the arm's rear balances the assembly and applies a downward tracking force of typically 1 to 3 grams to maintain stylus contact with the groove walls, as recommended for most moving magnet and moving coil cartridges. The effective mass of these tonearms, generally ranging from 5 to 15 grams, combines with the cartridge's compliance to determine the system's , ideally tuned to 8-12 Hz to avoid interference in the audible range. Tracking methods evolved to address limitations in early pivoted radial designs, where the arm's pivot causes angular misalignment—known as —that worsens toward the record's inner grooves, leading to increased and uneven groove contact. In the , tangential or linear tracking tonearms emerged as an , employing air-bearing slides or servo-driven to move the arm parallel to the stylus path, maintaining perpendicular contact with the groove throughout playback and reducing error to near zero. Examples include the air-bearing arms from Maplenoll and servo-controlled systems in Technics models, which improved but added mechanical complexity. Cueing mechanisms facilitate safe stylus placement and removal, with manual lever systems or hydraulic lifts using viscous damping fluid to gently raise and lower the arm, preventing scratches from abrupt drops. Hydraulic designs, common in models, provide controlled descent over several seconds for precision. Auto-return features, introduced in the for automatic record changers, detect the end of a side via a trip mechanism and automatically lift the arm, returning it to the rest position to enable seamless multi-record playback. Fine adjustments optimize performance, including anti-skate compensation, which applies an inward force—often via springs, magnets, or calibrated dials—to counteract the lateral skating force generated by the arm's offset , ensuring balanced on both groove walls and reducing channel imbalance. Vertical tracking (VTA) alignment, set to 20-25 degrees by adjusting the arm's at the pivot, matches the typical cutting of records, promoting optimal rake and minimizing vertical modulation .

Stylus and Cartridge Designs

The , the component that physically contacts the record groove to trace its modulations, has evolved through various materials to balance durability, record preservation, and sound fidelity. For disc phonographs, early 78 RPM shellac records were typically played with inexpensive steel needles, which caused significant wear to both the needle and the record surface due to their relative softness and tendency to dull quickly. emerged as a more durable alternative in the late 1940s, offering improved resistance to abrasion while minimizing damage to or vinyl records. By the 1950s, styluses became standard, prized for their exceptional hardness—nearly 90 times that of —and longevity of 500-1000 hours of playback, far outlasting predecessors and reducing record wear to negligible levels. Prior to electric cartridges, acoustic phonographs from the late 19th to early 20th centuries used mechanical soundboxes with mica diaphragms and steel or jewel styluses to amplify via horns. The transition to electric pickups in the 1920s-1930s enabled for amplification. The cartridge houses the stylus and converts its mechanical vibrations into an electrical signal, with designs varying by transduction method to suit different performance needs and budgets. or piezoelectric cartridges, common in low-cost players, generate high output signals (often 60-70 times that of magnetic types) without requiring a dedicated , though they sacrifice fidelity with limited low-frequency response and higher distortion. Moving magnet (MM) cartridges, introduced in the , feature a attached to the stylus assembly that moves within fixed coils, producing a moderate output of 2-5 mV and balancing affordability with good tracking and . For superior audio quality, moving coil (MC) cartridges reverse this setup, with coils moving around fixed s to yield low outputs of 0.2-1 mV and enhanced detail retrieval, though they demand high-end amplification and are more susceptible to handling damage. Stylus compliance, the flexibility of its suspension—typically a rubber or elastomer damping element—plays a critical role in system stability, with the arm-cartridge resonance tuned to 8-12 Hz to filter out low-frequency warps and footfall vibrations without compromising audible bass. This damping prevents excessive ringing, ensuring the stylus maintains precise groove contact. Proper maintenance extends stylus life and preserves sound quality; regular cleaning with a soft brush or stylus-specific fluid removes debris that could accelerate wear, while replacement is essential once playtime approaches the material's limit to avoid damaging records. tip shapes further influence performance: conical tips provide robust tracking but limit high-frequency accuracy due to their spherical contact, whereas elliptical or advanced Shibata tips offer narrower profiles for superior groove tracing, reducing (IM) distortion and enhancing clarity in inner grooves.

Signal Processing

Pickup and Transduction Methods

The conversion of mechanical vibrations from the stylus into electrical signals is a core function of phonograph pickups, marking a pivotal advancement from acoustic to electrical reproduction. Early phonographs relied on acoustic pickups, where the stylus directly vibrated a diaphragm to produce sound waves through a horn, limiting dynamic range to approximately 30 dB due to mechanical constraints. In 1925, introduced the first practical electrical pickup system, the WE4A, which used electromagnetic principles to generate signals suitable for amplification, dramatically expanding to around 70 dB in modern implementations by enabling finer groove modulation capture and reduced noise. This transition allowed for broader and higher , fundamentally shaping phonograph playback. Piezoelectric or crystal pickups, emerging in the early and gaining prominence by the mid-1930s, operate by deforming a piezoelectric attached to the stylus under groove pressure, generating voltage proportional to the mechanical stress. These provided high output levels—often several volts—making them suitable for early amplifiers without additional gain stages, but suffered from poor low-frequency response due to the crystal's resonant properties, with typical cutoffs around 50 Hz that distorted bass reproduction. Patented as early as 1918, they became widely used in budget players during the late , though their limitations in handling sub-bass frequencies restricted overall audio quality compared to later designs. Magnetic transduction dominates modern phonograph cartridges, converting groove motion into electrical signals via , with output voltage directly proportional to groove velocity to maintain consistent across frequencies under the RIAA recording standard. Moving magnet (MM) cartridges attach a small permanent to the cantilever end, which moves within stationary coils to induce current, producing moderate output voltages around 5 mV that simplify integration with standard phono preamplifiers. In contrast, moving coil (MC) cartridges reverse this configuration, with lightweight coils affixed to the cantilever moving through a fixed , yielding lower outputs of about 0.5 mV but offering superior detail and due to . Both types ensure compatibility with cartridge mounting standards, such as half-inch spacing, for seamless headshell integration. Stereo magnetic cartridges achieve channel separation through orthogonal coil arrangements, where left and right coils are positioned at 90 degrees to independently capture horizontal groove modulations while minimizing crosstalk. This design, refined in the 1950s with stereo record introduction, typically yields separation ratios exceeding 25 dB. Induced hum rejection, particularly against 60 Hz mains interference, relies on symmetrical shielding, balanced wiring, and the orthogonal geometry that cancels vertical noise components common in monaural grooves. These features enhance signal integrity, allowing modern pickups to preserve the full dynamic potential of vinyl recordings.

Equalization and Frequency Response

Equalization in phonograph playback involves applying standardized frequency response curves to compensate for the pre-emphasis applied during recording, ensuring accurate reproduction of the original audio signal. The RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) equalization curve, established as the industry standard in 1954, defines this process for long-playing (LP) records and singles. During recording, low frequencies are attenuated to prevent groove overload—reducing amplitude by approximately 14 dB at 50 Hz relative to the 1 kHz reference—while high frequencies are boosted, reaching about +13.7 dB at 10 kHz, to optimize dynamic range and minimize surface noise. Playback applies the inverse curve, boosting low frequencies by +14 dB at 50 Hz and attenuating highs by -13.7 dB at 10 kHz, resulting in a flat overall response. This equalization significantly enhances audio quality by extending the usable and improving (SNR). For LPs, the effective achieves 20 Hz to 20 kHz with ±1 dB variation under optimal conditions, capturing the full range of human hearing. In contrast, early 78 rpm shellac records were limited to roughly 80 Hz to 6 kHz due to their coarser grooves and lack of standardized pre-emphasis. The de-emphasis during playback reduces overall noise by 20-30 dB, particularly in high-frequency content where surface hiss predominates, yielding a typical SNR of 60-70 dB for well-mastered LPs with RIAA. By constraining low-frequency excursions, RIAA prevents physical from excessive groove modulation, allowing longer playing times and clearer bass reproduction without compromising lateral space. Prior to RIAA, alternative curves were used for various media, including the AES (Audio Engineering Society) standard proposed in 1938 for early electric recordings, which featured a low-frequency turnover at 400 Hz and high-frequency roll-off reaching -12 dB at 10 kHz. The NAB (National Association of Broadcasters) curve, originally developed for magnetic tape and applied to some cylinders and early discs, had a 500 Hz low-frequency turnover and -16 dB roll-off at 10 kHz, prioritizing broadcast compatibility over disc-specific optimization. Modern phonograph preamplifiers often include switchable settings to accommodate these legacy curves, enabling accurate playback of non-RIAA media like vintage 78s or cylinders without tonal imbalance.

Optical and Digital Readouts

Optical pickup systems represent a non-contact alternative to traditional stylus-based playback in phonographs, utilizing laser beams to scan record grooves and extract audio signals without physical wear. The concept originated in the early 1980s through research at , where Robert S. Reis developed an optical phonograph in his 1981 master's thesis, demonstrating the potential for laser-based groove reading. By 1982, Robert E. Stoddard further validated the feasibility during his graduate work in at Stanford, proving that lasers could accurately track groove modulations. Commercialization advanced in the 1980s with prototypes like the system, which employed laser interferometry to profile groove walls, though early models struggled with high-frequency tracking. The Japanese ELP Corporation introduced the LT-1 series in the late 1990s, refining the technology for audiophile use and remaining commercially available as of 2025; these systems direct multiple low-power lasers (typically helium-neon or ) at the groove, measuring lateral velocity through diffraction patterns created by the groove walls acting as a variable grating. This optical method detects minute variations in light scattering and phase shifts, converting them into electrical signals via photodetectors, achieving playback without any mechanical contact. A primary advantage of optical pickups is the elimination of record wear, as no contacts the vinyl surface, theoretically allowing infinite playbacks without degradation; this also avoids wear and reduces tracking errors inherent in mechanical systems. Systems like the ELP LT-1XA offer frequency responses extending to 25 kHz, capturing ultrasonic content beyond standard audible ranges while minimizing rumble and feedback. However, limitations include high sensitivity to surface contaminants such as dust and scratches, which can scatter and introduce or tracking failures, necessitating pristine records and controlled environments. Additionally, these units command premium prices, with models like the ELP LT-2XRC retailing for over $10,000, restricting adoption to archival or high-end applications. Digital readouts extend phonograph playback by converting analog groove signals into digital formats, commonly through analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) during vinyl ripping processes. Best practices recommend sampling at 96 kHz with 24-bit depth to preserve and frequency content up to 20 kHz, accommodating the full audible spectrum while providing headroom for limitations in vinyl sources. This resolution captures subtle groove details without , though lower rates like 44.1 kHz/16-bit suffice for basic archiving if computational resources are constrained. Software such as Audacity facilitates the process by recording via USB interfaces and applying curves to reverse the recording industry's pre-emphasis, restoring flat ; the tool's Filter Curve EQ effect includes a built-in RIAA preset for precise de-emphasis. Hybrid systems combine analog playback with immediate digital output, bridging traditional phonographs and modern workflows. In the , efforts to revive capacitance-based technologies, akin to the 1980s (CED) for video, explored non-contact electrostatic sensing of groove variations, though audio-focused implementations remained experimental and niche. More practically, integrated USB turntables emerged, such as Audio-Technica's AT-LP3 model released in 2017, which uses a built-in phono preamp and ADC to stream digitized audio directly to computers at up to 48 kHz/16-bit, enabling real-time RIAA decoding and file export without external hardware. These hybrids offer convenience for while retaining analog warmth, though they may introduce minor conversion artifacts compared to pure optical methods. Overall, optical and digital readouts enhance phonograph longevity and versatility, particularly for preservation, despite challenges in cost and environmental sensitivity.

Modern Applications

Contemporary Models and Revival

In the 2020s, phonograph manufacturing has seen a notable resurgence, led by established brands such as Pro-Ject, Rega, and Technics. Pro-Ject offers a range of models emphasizing , including the Debut Carbon EVO series with carbon fiber tonearms for reduced . Rega continues to produce high-fidelity turntables like the Planar 3, known for their belt-drive mechanisms and minimalist design that prioritizes sonic purity. Technics maintains the iconic SL-1200 series, originally introduced in 1972 as a direct-drive model and updated in subsequent iterations, including the 2019 MK7 with a coreless direct-drive motor for enhanced and stability. Entry-level turntables, often fully automatic and suitable for beginners, are available for under $200, such as the AT-LP60X, while high-end hi-fi models exceed $1,000, exemplified by the Technics SL-1200G at approximately $5,300. The has fueled this manufacturing boom, with U.S. shipments of LP/EP records reaching 43.6 million units in 2024, marking the 18th consecutive year of growth and generating $1.4 billion in revenue. This surge, peaking in the , stems from consumer fatigue with digital streaming's intangible nature and a desire for tactile experiences, alongside artists like releasing exclusive vinyl variants to engage fans. Globally, vinyl sales reached 106.5 million units in 2023. Contemporary models incorporate modern conveniences while preserving analog fidelity, such as built-in connectivity supporting HD for high-resolution wireless streaming, as seen in the JBL Spinner BT and Cambridge Audio Alva ST. Carbon fiber components, particularly in tonearms, reduce vibrations and improve tracking, featured in Pro-Ject's Debut EVO 2 and Fluance RT85N. Some entry-level units include tonearm return mechanisms for ease of use, though precise calibration remains a manual process on most hi-fi models. Historically, the TPA-1 of 1955 served as a benchmark as the first all-transistor portable phonograph, eliminating tubes for portability and efficiency. Environmental concerns accompany this growth, as vinyl production relies on PVC, with only about 24.3% of PVC waste recycled in the and associated regions in 2023. Manufacturers are addressing this through initiatives like increased use of recycled PVC and sustainable pressing processes to mitigate the format's , estimated at an average of 1.15 kg CO₂e per record (cradle-to-factory gate) as of 2024 data from pressing plants.

Use in Audio Production and Collecting

In audio production, phonographs have played a pivotal role in the development of , a technique originating in the 1970s hip-hop scene where DJs like innovated by manipulating vinyl records to create rhythmic breaks and sound effects. Flash's techniques, including cutting and , transformed the turntable into a , laying the foundation for modern DJing. Direct-drive turntables, prized for their high-torque motors that enable quick starts, stops, and precise control, became essential for and in professional setups. Contemporary integration with digital software, such as DJ Pro's DVS (Digital Vinyl System), allows producers to control digital audio files using time-coded vinyl, blending analog tactile feedback with effects like looping and pitch adjustment. Among audiophiles, phonographs are central to high-end listening environments designed to minimize and enhance . Vacuum hold-down systems, as featured in SOTA turntables like the Nova VII, secure records flat against the platter to reduce wow and flutter, ensuring consistent playback. Isolated platforms, such as IsoAcoustics' series, decouple the turntable from external resonances using patented , preserving the subtle nuances of analog sound. Organizations like the recognize vinyl's appeal through its even-order harmonic distortion, which imparts a perceived "warmth" by softening transients and enriching tonal depth, as noted in their pro audio references on . Restoration efforts in the have revitalized phonograph use for legacy formats, with kits like Pro-Ject's 78 RPM pulley enabling modern turntables to accurately play records at their original speed. In collector markets, rare Edison cylinders command significant value; for instance, pristine examples from the early have fetched over $1,000 at auctions, driven by their historical and acoustic rarity. Phonographs continue to influence cultural practices, particularly in hip-hop where sampling from vinyl records—pioneered in the 1970s by DJs extending breaks from and LPs—has shaped genre-defining tracks and production techniques. In 2025, the Smithsonian's "Art of Noise" exhibition at Cooper Hewitt, opening December 12, 2025, highlights phonograph collections as key artifacts in the evolution of music and playback technology.

References

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