Indeed - Brian - you hit the nail on the head.  The use of imperial here is 
because of an historical element.  It's not really that important.  The 
question is - would imperial be the unit if vinyl records were invented' today? 
 Probably not I would guess.

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:44365] RE: Records
Date: Sat, 4 Apr 2009 19:08:50 -0700



I don't know about other sizes, but the "Long Play" records or "LP" was 
designed by an American record company.  Columbia I think....out of LA.  Early 
50s if I remember right...so I wouldn't be surprised if it was designed to 12 
inches.
But....does any of this *REALLY* matter?    The 3.5 inch floppy was in fact 
90mm.  That is an industry fact.   Everything being discussed here is just 
conjecture and speculation.  


-------- Original Message --------

Subject: [USMA:44364] RE: Records

From: Jeremiah MacGregor <[email protected]>

Date: Sat, April 04, 2009 6:52 pm

To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>



Oh yes, the old shrinkage factor.  Obviously if the record size was intended to 
be 12 inches, it would start out larger and then end up 12 inches after 
shrinkage, yet no matter how many records are produced they all end up 302 mm 
in the US and 300 mm elsewhere.    I still don't understand how my 45s and 78s 
managed to shrink to an exact 175 mm and 250 mm.  Maybe you can explain it.  It 
sort of proves that the metric size were what was intended and the inch size 
was an approximation to satisfy English speakers.     And yes, I mention 
Germany because that is where the first disc records were invented by Emile 
Berliner and they were metric.  That is also why they measure the mass in 
grams.   When was the last time you measured a record to verify the size?  My 
bet is never, because then you would learn the truth and have to admit it.   
Jerry    
 
   From: Stephen Humphreys <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, April 4, 2009 8:56:32 PM
Subject: [USMA:44359] RE: Records

  I know someone who works in the production of vinyl records. 
 Besides the fact that 12" (10" and 7") were around since the UK/US even knew 
of metric they are still imperial based today. What you (JPS) don't realise 
(although in reality you prob do) is the shrinkage after the first 14" inches 
are pressed. 
 If it helps high quality records are usually expressed in grammes (eg 130 
gramme vinyl).   
 You may see a difference here - I purposefully point out metric usage in vinyl 
record production whereas our returning poster cannot debate the idea that 
records can possibly be anything but metric and searches google for a rare 
mention of metric.  From Germany. 
 As it happens I'm an audiophile and analog is my big hobby - I wonder if 
anyone out there shares my passion and has a Linn Sondek LP12 deck?  :-D

  Date: Sat, 4 Apr 2009 06:53:56 -0700
From: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:44328] RE: Records
To: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]

   Brian,   My point is that the records never were the dimensions stated in 
inches.  Go measure them, just don't look at them.  The 7 and 10 inch records 
were originally designed with metric dimensions in mind as 175 and 250 mm and 
those dimensions continued on even when the name was changed.     The LPs made 
by American companies are 302 mm (not 305 mm) and the ones by foreign companies 
are a true 300 mm.  Even if it was conceived in inches it wasn't 12 (305 mm).  
It goes to show you that those who claim to know inches don't really recognize 
them when they are wrong and refuse to measure them for fear of having to admit 
the truth that they are not an imperial conceived product.  I believe they 
would fall into the category of hidden metric.   The so-called 3.5 inch floppy 
disk fell into the same category.  It was a true metric product of 90 x 94 x 
3.3 mm.     Jerry
 
   From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Cc: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, April 4, 2009 12:22:18 AM
Subject: [USMA:44321] RE: Records

 Interesting.   In my opinion this is one of those situations where the inch 
term can still be used even if the US was totally metric.  Nothing wrong with 
calling an album a 12 inch.   (Technically the 33 is a 33 1/2 rpm album....) 
 Speaking of that, the Ice-T song "I'm your pusher" had a little dialogue in 
which a supposed drug user is asking Ict-T for some drugs and Ice-T responds, 
"I can hook you up with a twelve inch."    
 I do agree with you Jerry that mostly in the US we say 45s and LPs vs the 
size.  However, there are many instances (usually corner cases) where inches 
were used. 
 I remember back in the day, during my hardcore punk listening days, bands 
would "cut a 7 inch".   At the same time, you'd get special remixes usually on 
a "12 inch".   I still have a handful of 7 inch records cut by small indie 
bands....and also a full 12" extended mix of Michael Jackson's Billie Jean.   
 ......and lots of times when these extended mixes would be released on CDs, 
they'd be refered to as 12" extended mix.   I have quite a few Depeche Mode 
special issues with these references, although to be fair, mostly they were 
reissues containing UK dance hall remixes or were UK imports to begin with. 
 With regards to your measurements though, lots of my vinyl is of different 
construction.  Some are very thick, heavy, and brittle.  Others are thin, 
floppy and seem to be able to be bent strongly without cracking.   Looking at 
and holding these albums, they have slightly different lip edges which could 
easily account for 3mm.    
 I'd be curious to take a larger measurement sampling.    But considering the 
LP (the 33 1/2 rpm album, 12 inch) was designed by an American company, I don't 
doubt it was designed to inches.  -------- Original Message --------
Subject: [USMA:44320] Records
From: Jeremiah MacGregor <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, April 03, 2009 8:38 pm
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>

  It seems the 45  min^-1 record is 60 years old.     
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/08/business_the_seven_inch_single/html/1.stm
   This is one of those remnants that extremists get excited over because the 
record mentioned is called by an inch name, even though it is incorrect.   In 
the US we never called records by their inch size..  We always called them by 
their speed.   We had the 45 min^-1 singles, 33-1/3 long playing and the older 
78 min^-1.  Everyone knows them simply as 45s, 33s and 78s.  Never anthing 
else.   Yet extremists falsely claim these to be inch based because they were 
falsely given inch names.   I happen to have a sample of all three record types 
and I can honestly state that none are to the measurements the extremists drool 
over.   My 45s are 175 mm.  7 inches is 178 mm.  Thus the records are 3 mm 
shorter then their inch name claim.   My 33s are 302 mm.  12 inches is 305 mm.. 
 Thus the records are 3 mm shorter then their inch name claim.   My 78s are 250 
mm.  10 inches is 254 mm.  Thus the records are 4 mm shorter then their inch 
name claim.   I believe that outside the US 33s are 300 mm exactly.  Some of 
you on this list who do not come from the US may be able to check their record 
collection and verify the diameters.     The 17.5 cm disc was originally 
designed by Emile Berliner of Germany and he chose the metric size as standard 
and the inch sizes were the closes the English could come up with, but even 
with inch names they never changed the sizes Berliner chose to the rounded inch 
sizes they named them.      Berliner arranged for the first gramophones to be 
made in Europe during the trip to Germany 1889-90. According to Raymond Wile, 
"It was in Germany that the first commercial beginnings of the gramophone 
occurred - presumably in July 1890. The toy makers Kammer and Reinhardt in 
Waltershausen (Thuringia) began to market small hand-propelled gramophones and 
a talking-doll. For the doll, a small 8 centimeter disc was prepared, and for 
the regular machine a 12.5 centimeter disc. The records were available in three 
substances during the period they were marketed. Without adequate documentation 
it is impossible to determine if the copies made in hard rubber or celluloid 
were contemporaneous, or which substances had precedence. For an additional 
price, zinc discs also were available. The records were produced by two 
companies, one known solely by the initials GFKC, the other was the Rhenische 
Gummi und Celluloid Fabrik Werkes of Necharan, Mannheim. The machines and 
records also were imported into England, notably by J. Lewis Young, but were 
available for only a few years in both countries" (Wile 1990 p. 16). As a 
result, Berliner's efforts led to the establishment of Deutsche Grammophon 
Gesellschaft (DGG, later to become PolyGram).    
http://history.sandiego..edu/gen/recording/berliner.html   Thus despite the 
corrupted names, vinly records are a true metric invention.   Jerry  


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