Way too light a tracking force can sometimes sound a little like your video.
Why does my vinyl sound distorted.
Bad tracking indeed damages the vinyl as your stylus bumps agains the groove walls in stead of actually accurately following them.
To my ears this doesn t sound like an electronic issue it sounds like an issue originating with the stylus vinyl interface.
Setting the tracking force too light causes distortion and excess record wear.
The record is damaged the turntable is cheap and nasty the tonearm is incorrectly calibrated correct balance tracking force and anti skate forces are critical to clean playback and to avoid damage to records.
If you have a spare stylus i d try that or at least get a good magnifier to.
As needed to get good sound quality.
Some would call it a design flaw for others it s just part of the vinyl experience.
It is usually best to use the manufacturer s highest recommended pressure but no higher.
They don t just convert the microscopic grooves of your vinyl records into sound.
They have become too thin to fill the entire groove width and bump against the wall where the groove modulates causing damage.
Definitely no fuzz distortion there.
Those unwanted movements result in distortion which muddies the sound.
Vinyl playback fuzzy distorted first system.
A few days ago my pro ject debut carbon came in the mail.
Let s dig briefly into some light physics.
Problem with a record skipping or distortion here are some things to check.
Phono cartridges are incredibly sensitive transducers.
Cartridges can pick up all vibrations including those caused by footsteps and all other unwanted movements that reach your tonearm.
Inner groove distortion is an audible deterioration in sound quality that sometimes occurs when playing tracks close to the end of each side.
Vinyl can sound bad for all sorts of reasons chief among which.