I saw in another post (Jim LeSurf in the "Speakers to play back voice" thread) the expression "clicks and pops".
This is such a common expression - in relation to cleaning up captures
from LPs anyway - that I normally don't think about it, but for some
reason it suddenly occurred to me to wonder - what's the difference? A
click is what I'd normally think of as the unwanted effect of playing
over a scratch, but what's a pop? The word implies perhaps a slight
resonance or ringing, maybe?
I saw in another post (Jim LeSurf in the "Speakers to play back voice" thread) the expression "clicks and pops".
This is such a common expression - in relation to cleaning up captures
from LPs anyway - that I normally don't think about it, but for some
reason it suddenly occurred to me to wonder - what's the difference? A
click is what I'd normally think of as the unwanted effect of playing
over a scratch, but what's a pop? The word implies perhaps a slight
resonance or ringing, maybe?
On 26/05/2022 11:10, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
I saw in another post (Jim LeSurf in the "Speakers to play back
voice" thread) the expression "clicks and pops".
This is such a common expression - in relation to cleaning up
captures from LPs anyway - that I normally don't think about it, but
for some reason it suddenly occurred to me to wonder - what's the >>difference? A click is what I'd normally think of as the unwanted
effect of playing over a scratch, but what's a pop? The word implies >>perhaps a slight resonance or ringing, maybe?
I would know the difference when I hear them. Clicks are short, pops
are slightly longer and do seem to have some resonance. Perhaps the >difference could be illustrated with an oscilloscope, in that way that
a violin's sound shows as a saw tooth.
On Thu 26/05/2022 11:10, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
I saw in another post (Jim LeSurf in the "Speakers to play back voice" thread) the expression "clicks and pops".
This is such a common expression - in relation to cleaning up captures
from LPs anyway - that I normally don't think about it, but for some
reason it suddenly occurred to me to wonder - what's the difference? A click is what I'd normally think of as the unwanted effect of playing
over a scratch, but what's a pop? The word implies perhaps a slight resonance or ringing, maybe?
Could it be that a click is a transient fast-rising noise caused by a
scratch on the disc surface as suggested which produces a lot of high frequency content, and a pop is a drop-out or slow rising edge which
contains very much more of a thump-type sound?
On 26/05/2022 11:10, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
I saw in another post (Jim LeSurf in the "Speakers to play back voice"
thread) the expression "clicks and pops".
This is such a common expression - in relation to cleaning up captures
from LPs anyway - that I normally don't think about it, but for some
reason it suddenly occurred to me to wonder - what's the difference? A
click is what I'd normally think of as the unwanted effect of playing
over a scratch, but what's a pop? The word implies perhaps a slight
resonance or ringing, maybe?
I would know the difference when I hear them. Clicks are short, pops are >slightly longer and do seem to have some resonance. Perhaps the
difference could be illustrated with an oscilloscope, in that way that a >violin's sound shows as a saw tooth.
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