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.
Cartridge turntables are used to play records. The cartridge is the part of the turntable that converts the vibrations picked up from the record into music.
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).
it was a Gramophone record player that is a smaller version of a record player
a needle is put on the line of the record and then it plays A record is placed on a turntable and turned at an appropriate speed. A tone arm with its head (where the cartridge is located) is lowered until the stylus (which is attached to the cartridge) slips into the groove in the record. The stylus responds to the irregularities in the grooves of the record and converts these into electrical signals. The turntable sends the signals to an amplifier and the output is relayed to headphones or speakers.
A phonograph is commonly called a record player.
it was called tape. used by ancient people to record music.
the ultra glide record player was used for recording player
A phonograph is commonly called a record player.
Photo Sensitive Drum, cleaning blade, and primary corona wire
What is dual CD player wire color codes?
you cut the yellow and black wire from the origanal plug and wire these from the CD player wire the yellow, red, blue, wire into the yellow and the black from origanal plug to black on CD player