by Record-changer »
Tue Aug 05, 2014 8:30 am
They put that there to give you time to make the changeover to the next disc in a multi-disc program without a crossfader. You had time to start the next disc, turn that one up, turn this one down, and stop this one with only two hands, before it got to the locked groove at the end (which often makes a once per rotation thump). It was also a visible indicator of when the change needs to be made. With some programs (e.g. speeches), there are periods of silence that might cause the operator to make the change too soon, or let the disc play into the locked groove. This way, he can see it.
Now, almost all DJ equipment has a crossfader, so it is no longer needed.
There also may be another reason. In the days before good vinyl, they alternated center-start and outside start discs within radio programs. This prevented the sudden change in quality when changing from one disc to the next. But you played it and determined it was outside start, so that is not it.
Note that for years, transcription discs turned at 33, but had a groove needing a 2.5 mil stylus. They were also recorded with the NAB lateral transcription curve before RIAA became the standard recording curve.
Do you know if these are distributed transcriptions or aircheck transcriptions? The aircheck transcriptions were recordings made of the actual broadcasts. For years, this was required by the FCC. The aircheck discs usually have handwritten labels.