An early long-playing (LP) record made from vinyl copolymer, 1950s.
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Picture Number:10280210 Credit:Science Museum/Science & Society Picture Library
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Caption:
This recording by Frank Phillips was presented to the Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress of Birmingham during their visit to the Tyseley Works of Bakelite Plastics Ltd. Vinyl copolymer (polyvinylchloride(PVC)) records have been produced commercially in Britain since the 1950s. Earlier LPs were made of other plastics such as Bakelite and shellac. The advantages of vinyl records those made from these earlier materials were that they were lighter, less brittle, and were cheap and easy to produce, making mass production possible. Problems of sound quality, ease of damage by scratching, and warping of records when exposed to heat were prominent factors in the decline of vinyl from the 1980s, and its replacement by polycarbonate compact discs (CDs).
In Collection of: Science & Society Picture Library Subject(s) > Trade & Industry > PlasticsRelated to:
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Appears in: Domestic plastic
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