Any reference for that? I would suggest the smoked effect to look nice. If the sun is intense enough to warp a record in 45 minutes whilst it is rotating then you really shouldn't have your turntable there.
And note I've never seen a DJ deck with a dust cover and that is the time you are MOST likely to get a drink spilled on it. Just don't buy this theory.
And note I've never seen a DJ deck with a dust cover and that is the time you are MOST likely to get a drink spilled on it. Just don't buy this theory.
Probably, maybe even a hundred years ago.Someone mentioned resonance in dust covers - yes I suppose it is an issue, someone may have invented a well-damped dust cover?
My Vic has a huge chunk of wood for a cover, dust cover resonance wasn't much of a issue.
It likely has a few other "issues" that would stop people from just enjoying 100 year old tunes.
Problem is on rainy nights with no power, next to the fire place and a little wind.
I still get love letters from the ladies that enjoyed going through my records.

Such a simple concept but much wisdom indeed.And note I've never seen a DJ deck with a dust cover and that is the time you are MOST likely to get a drink spilled on it. Just don't buy this theory.
With dual turntables, with absolutely no nonsense covers= removed. The cover will clunk your table way before a drink does. In a dusty old underground warehouses. We had the time of our lives, 2 grand cash at the door.
And not a drink spilled. Concrete floors never a skip. With a line of 18" Vegas filling your soul.
100 people with a wood floor bounce, disaster. 1000 people in a dingy warehouse. No problem at all
On the contrary. Dust cover during the playback is not recommended. Its flat surface creates feedback.The video is of an LP rotating on a turntable without a dust cover. Not recommended.