Submitted by caedin8 t3_103appl in askscience
So my understanding of vinyl is that the single needle runs through the groove cut into the vinyl record, and then that vibration is the analog sound signal that gets amplified and played back through the speakers.
If that is true, how does a vinyl record record separate sound for the left and right speaker, if it just has one single groove?
electric_ionland t1_j2y3f3w wrote
The groove is a V shape with 90 degree angle. Each side of the V encodes for a different channel. The result (depending on how they are configured) is that the up and down movement of the stylus give you the sum of both channels while the left to right movement give you the difference between them.