The needle vibrates sending sound waves / vibrationswhich plays the music but very quiet so that's why they used cones .
See related link below .
A hypodermic needle. a record player needle
Most likely your record player won't work because you need a new needle on the head of your record reader.
The needle for a record player is called a stylus. It is the part that makes contact with the record and reads the grooves to produce sound.
A vinyl record player operates on a turntable. A record is put on the turntable and then set into a rotation by a tonearm. A stylus needle, which is at the end of the tonearm reads the vibrating sounds and plays the record.
It doesn't have to; you might invent a record player where the record remains in place, and the needle moves. The inventors probably thought it was easier to spin the record.It doesn't have to; you might invent a record player where the record remains in place, and the needle moves. The inventors probably thought it was easier to spin the record.It doesn't have to; you might invent a record player where the record remains in place, and the needle moves. The inventors probably thought it was easier to spin the record.It doesn't have to; you might invent a record player where the record remains in place, and the needle moves. The inventors probably thought it was easier to spin the record.
A Victrola is a brand of phonograph, a type of record player. It works by spinning a vinyl record on a turntable, while a needle (stylus) moves along the grooves of the record, which creates vibrations that are then amplified into sound through a speaker.
Warped sounds from a Crosley record player could be caused by a warped record, a dirty stylus, improper tracking force, or a damaged needle.
You need to take the old needle or stylus off and take it to a dealer and replace it, you cn find this under the arm at the end of the arm.
To put a needle on a phonograph, locate the tonearm and gently lower the needle onto the spinning record while the turntable is on. Ensure the needle aligns with the grooves of the record to avoid damage.
That question belongs to a vinyl record player. It is the distance from the pivot of the tone arm to the cartridge with the replay needle.
The master record is cut on a machine a little bit like like a record player, only the music is fed TO the cutting needle and imprints the groove with ridges and bumps as it cuts. the needle moves across the record at a pre- determined rate.The coil of swarth that comes off the needle is sucked up by a tiny vacuum cleaner to stop it from piling up.The master is duplicated by a moulding process.
Yes, but you should replace the needle and/or cartridge first. The grooves on shellac records have a different size than vinyl records and if you use a vinyl needle on a shellac record, you can damage both the record and the needle. Look on ebay for a "78rpm stylus" and find one that will fit in your cartridge. It'll generally cost around $20 (of course there are more expensive options like replacing the cartridge or higher quality styli).