Ja, maar als je 'm op de AUX ingang aansluit is het geluid van een platenspeler zonder voorversterker bijna niet te horen, omdat het geluid vervormd is.
Zie onderstaande tekst:
"The problem most people encounter with a turntable is that its output
can’t be plugged directly into the line level input of any recorder.
Most turntable cartridges put out a signal on the order of just a
couple of milliVolts (mV). The turntable also can’t just be plugged
directly into the mic inputs on a mixer, recorder or computer, even
though they are setup to handle a signal with an amplitude of only a
couple of mV. The reason is that when LP vinyl records are recorded,
they have a special equalization curve (called the RIAA EQ curve)
applied to the signal. The RIAA is the Record Industry Association of
America. This special EQ curve is used to limit low frequencies and
accentuate high frequencies when the disk is made to account for the
limitations of the vinyl LP medium. Then when the LP disk is played
back, the opposite EQ curve is applied to flatten the signal out again
(i.e., accentuate the low frequencies and reduce the high
frequencies). This special EQ resides in what is known as a phono
preamplifier."
The only thing that stays the same is change (Change - Melissa Etheridge)
[b]"Formula 1 is a magic thing and a few missing decibels will not change that."[/b] - Joe Saward