Ebay offers a range of rpm records new and second hand, a variety of sellers would sell all sorts of records ranging all the Music Genres. Another website entitled the 78 rpm Record Home page also sells and buys second hand records.
One - 78 can only equal 78.
77+1 = 78 is one such example
How about 6 times 13 = 78 as one example
78 minutes is one hour and 18 minutes.
The two angles sum to 180 degrees. So if one is 78, the other is 102.
They stopped making 78 RPM records because they became outdated and technology was advancing. After the 78 RPM records of the 1900's, the 33 1/3 RPM records were created.
1894, even though the first records varied in rpm (from about 60-100).
I heard about one that went for (I think) close to $4,000. And yes, they did release some 78 RPM's. They were for the Indian market since some of their villages didn't have electricity yet and had to rely on hand-cranked turntables.
The number referred to the speed of the turntable in revolutions per minute (RPM). Vinyl records were recorded at various RPM. 33 1/3, 45, and 78
The most common ones, the 10" records, plays 3 minutes, but there are slight differences between records. *************** Yep! 12-inch a little over 4 minutes. Now before the 78 speed was standard and the sizes of the records were standardized it was all over the place. There were all kinds of experiments in speed and record size to get more time on a record. But by the late teens and around 1920 the 78 speed and 10-inch or 12-inch records was standard.
There were thirty-three grooves on one side of a standard 78 rpm record The seventy-eight rpm records were released in the early 1800s and were very popular at that time.
The version on vinyl, or a record (the LP at 33.3 RPM). I remember when there were 45 RPM records, usually just 1 song each side, and LP records or albums, which had the Long Playing version of songs, with, sometimes, repeated choruses, etc...Earlier vinyl records had 78 RPM records also.
Despite the growth in CD's and downloaded music, there is still a demand for vinyl, and so there are many specialist shops selling used records. 78 rpm records are, due to thier age and frgility, much harder to locate, but still exist in large numbers. Again, specialist retailers exist, both online and in shops, but another source is the growing number of charity shops. This requires harder work, as items are not usually categorised, but it can often pay dividends by unearthing collectable rareities.
Blues singing. If you have any of her original 78 rpm records on the Paramount label, you have a fortune on your hands.
there are several speeds for vinyl records, but for common formats it is 33 rpm, 45 rpm, 78 rpm and actually 33 1/3 rpm. that's what they were called 45's because they made 45 revolutions or rounds but it's actually revolutions per minute.
The most common 33-1/3 RPM record was 12", the 45 RPM was 7", and the 78 RPM was cut in both 12" and 16". Source: Wikipedia "also 10" vinyl"
It's pretty hard to tell, especially that other countries and smaller labels also created 78-RPM records and probably continued well into the 60s (Finland was an example given), in the US, some claim it was Chuck Berry's "Too Pooped to Pop" 78, released February 1960. See Recording History link