Mar 10, 2010

In The Groove

Understand that audio is simply vibrations. The groove in a record is created by a pin being vibrated by an audio signal while you rotate the record at a certain rate. Going the other way, when you place a pin in the groove, rotate the record at the same velocity as it was recorded, and amplify the signal coming from the pin, the resulting signal is the audio.

A CD is simply a digitized version of those vibrations, called a wave. If you truly understand how a CD works, a record is basically a much simpler subset of that process: No conversions from/to digital to/from analog. The waveform of the audio is stored exactly as a physical reproduction of that waveform.

A cassette tape works on the same principle but instead of the vibrations being stored as a physical groove in a record, it is stored by magnetizing those vibrations onto a metallic strip of material over the length of the material. Playing it back is somewhat like placing a tiny piece of metal by the tape as it moves and as the tape goes by that little piece of metal, the magnetic changes that were stored on the tape move the little piece of metal. Those movements/vibrations are amplified and that's your audio.

These are very simplified explanations, but only to get the ideas across.

It isn't magic.

This is a photo of a single groove on a vinyl record, magnified by 1000x.

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