A 3.5 mm input is a line level signal, and a turntable has a phono level signal. You can connect these, but you will need a phono preamp to go in between the two. An RCA cable plugs into to the preamp from the turntable, and an RCA to 3.5mm cable connects the preamp to the stereo.
Yes, you can plug a turntable into an auxiliary input jack, but you will need a phono preamp or a turntable with a built-in preamp. Standard auxiliary input jacks expect a line-level signal, while turntables output a lower-level signal that requires amplification. If your turntable does not have a built-in preamp, using an external phono preamp will ensure proper sound quality and volume.
A phono cartridge or magnetic cartridge is actually a transducer or converter. With it, you can play gramophone records on a phonograph or a turntable.
That receiver almost definitely does not have a "phono" input. This is a special input that was on older receivers that provided much more amplification than a "CD", "Tape", or "AUX" input. It also applied special "RIAA Equalization" to the signal so that the records would sound right. You need to buy a "phono pre-amp" in order to connect your turntable to your receiver. They are available at most audio/video stores. You simply plug the turntable into the into the pre-amp's input and then connect the pre-amp's output to an unused input on your receiver (eg. "CD", "Tape in" or "AUX").
It's not clear what you mean by "phono drive". If you are asking about using a phono preamp as a microphone or instrument preamp and sending the output of the preamp to the mixer, you will find that the phono preamp has two problems:First, it does not have anything close to flat frequency response. Phono preamps are designed with a strong equalization curve, which compensates for the EQ that is used when high-fidelity recordings are mastered. You will get lots of bass and no highs if you try to run a mic or instrument signal through a phono preamp.Second, you may find that it does not have a lot of headroom. A phono preamp is sensitive and a microphone or instrument could drive it into saturation.For the same reasons, you certainly cannot use a phono preamp as a line-level amplifier in a mixer.If you happen to be asking if you can use a Mod Squad or McCormack Phono Drive as a preamp for a turntable and run the output of the Phono Drive (as line level) into a DJ mixing desk, then the answer is yes, that should work quite nicely (even though the Phono Drive is, in my opinion, an absurdly overpriced piece of gear).
Phono is already an abbreviation, for phonograph.
The abbreviation for phonograph is "phono."
Phono-Comb was created in 1999.
Phono-Comb ended in 1999.
The Numark PT01USB Portable DJ Turntable with USB Connection is what you need.
no, you just need the game and the turntable
T.90 USB TURNTABLE is the best turntable for portability