Attempting to play a record, we found the needle and arm not traveling across the record. Inspecting the needle, I discovered that it was actually two sided. Meaning I could pull a small lever and flip between two separate needles on the same arm. Neither needle produced positive results so we ran out to a nearby repair shop to pick up replacement needles. He only had one in stock and told us to come back in a week to get the other.
We went home, replaced the needle and viola! We got beautiful music.
The stereo has multiple settings for sound including LP and stereo. If I set to LP, the sound is way too quiet, if I set it to stereo, I get a much louder, clearer sound. Everything was going well until....
I started putting on some other records and I noticed that the vocals were significantly quieter than the instruments. Which leaves me at my current predicament and series of questions. Any help is really appreciated.
1. Browsing the web, I've found many discussions about old record players damaging newer style records for a variety of reasons. Is my console one of these record players? Should I avoid playing my albums in this console? By "new" I mean stuff like Elton John and Zeppelin.
2. Is there any way a complete noob like myself could resolve the issue of the low-volume vocals? *note* When I was fussing with the needle, I had pulled out the three wires that connect the needle to the console (white/black/red). I swear I put them back in the correct order, but if I did not, could that cause my sound issues?*
3. Are the two needles on the player supposed to be different or can I put the same type needle on each? When I got home I just put one needle on the cartridge (is that what it's called?) and left the other side empty. I should have asked the guy when I bought the new needle, but was a bit anxious to get home.
Those are all the immediate questions I can think of. Any other advice is welcome too. I am not afraid to put a little work and elbow grease into this, but at the same time I don't want to mess it up, as it seemingly works for "some" of my records. Sorry if the questions are silly, but my only other record player is a small traveling type I've been using for years now and that is as straightforward as it gets.
Thanks for reading.





