Turntable setup question

1
Quick question-

I've got a turntable, a Technics SL-5200 and I can't hear a damn thing I play on it because I didn't have an amp. I expressed this to my dad when he asked "what would you like for Christmas" and I told him "an amp so I can listen to my record player". I am now the owner of a Yamaha HTR-5830 AV Receiver.

My my question is... is it possible to plug the turntable into this if I don't see any phono inputs? I'm thinking of bringing this back to the store for something less complicated (that doesn't even touch video) because this has way more options than I need. All I want it to do is let me listen to records.
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Turntable setup question

2
Anthony J wrote:My my question is... is it possible to plug the turntable into this if I don't see any phono inputs?


You'll need an additional phono preamp if there is not a dedicated phono /RIAA input for record decks. Not all amps have these.

Phono preamps are fairly cheap. Nad and QED make decent, cheap ones.

Yamaha make some great amps including multi-purpose ones like that one. You may find it easier to swap it for a simpler hi-fi only amp with a phono input as you say.

Turntable setup question

4
Rodabod wrote:s.

Yamaha make some great amps including multi-purpose ones like that one. You may find it easier to swap it for a simpler hi-fi only amp with a phono input as you say.


I have a Yamaha receiver from the 80's. Model # escapes me right now. It's great. I bought it NIB at a local stereo shop for like 200 bucks. It had been sitting in the basement assumed defective for 20 years. A few weeks prior to my visit, someone had taken it out and swapped the jumpers in the back and it worked beautifully. I checked the MSRP and it was around a grand. Score. The remote control is is like THAT big. I could control a space shuttle with it.

Turntable setup question

5
Tom wrote:
Rodabod wrote:s.

Yamaha make some great amps including multi-purpose ones like that one. You may find it easier to swap it for a simpler hi-fi only amp with a phono input as you say.


I have a Yamaha receiver from the 80's. Model # escapes me right now. It's great. I bought it NIB at a local stereo shop for like 200 bucks. It had been sitting in the basement assumed defective for 20 years. A few weeks prior to my visit, someone had taken it out and swapped the jumpers in the back and it worked beautifully. I checked the MSRP and it was around a grand. Score. The remote control is is like THAT big. I could control a space shuttle with it.


it's true, it's true

the yamaha shit from the 80s is quite good

a friend and i both have too-expensive stereos, and we were just saying that we are pretty sure we could get stereos we like 90% as much for 20% of what our present shit cost us. and yamaha amps were one of the things we thought of as a usable replacement.

Turntable setup question

8
Would one need the RIAA preamp if they run the turntable straight into the mic pres of a console?

Obviously, the levels can be boosted with the input trim but what about the magic that's imparted by the mentioned RIAA pre?

Is it still needed in this instance?


(I don't have one but to my ears it's not needed............just wondering if I'm missing something.....)
:spade: :spade:

Turntable setup question

9
full point wrote:Would one need the RIAA preamp if they run the turntable straight into the mic pres of a console?

Obviously, the levels can be boosted with the input trim but what about the magic that's imparted by the mentioned RIAA pre?

Is it still needed in this instance?


(I don't have one but to my ears it's not needed............just wondering if I'm missing something.....)


Yes, you need to use an RIAA preamp. It doesn't just offer gain, it also gives significant equilisation (eh. bass boost).

The reason is (in very short form) that vinyl physically works best with the bass rolled off before pressing. The fdrequency balance is maintained by using the inverse of this effect in the form of an eq during playback.

Search for RIAA specifications and it will say something along those lines somewhere.

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