Lathe cut records do not always match the volume of factory pressed vinyl or digital files. That is normal. Final cut level depends on running time, format size and how the audio behaves when a stylus cuts a physical groove in real time.
Every lathe cut is a balance between how loud the record plays, how clean it sounds, and how safely it tracks on a turntable.
Pressed records are made through a different manufacturing process and are often prepared through specialist lacquer mastering chains. A one-off or short-run lathe cut is made one record at a time in real time, so the physical limits of the groove matter more.
That means a lathe cut record is not judged by loudness alone. The goal is a strong, clean, stable cut that plays properly.
A track that sounds loud and exciting on streaming, CDJ or digital club playback often needs adjustment before it will cut well on vinyl.
The longer the side, the tighter the groove spacing has to be. Tighter groove spacing leaves less room for loud or aggressive material, so the cut level often has to come down.
Longer tracks on 10 inch and 7 inch records are the most common place this shows up.
Sharp hi-hats, sibilance, bright percussion and harsh top end make the cutting stylus move very quickly. If those peaks are not controlled, they can make the groove harder to track cleanly and sometimes cause breakup or skipping.
In those cases the record often has to be cut quieter, or the top end needs taming to make the groove behave.
Heavily limited digital masters are often built for digital loudness. On vinyl, that same file can force a lower cut level because the groove needs enough physical space to stay stable.
So a louder digital master does not always create a louder record. Sometimes the opposite happens.
If a track is not shaped with vinyl in mind, longer running times usually mean lower volume on the finished cut.
For longer or more demanding material, 12 inch usually gives more space for wider groove spacing and stronger playback level. A track that struggles on a 10 inch can often work better on a 12 inch.
Lathe cut records are engraved one at a time into PETG rather than mass-pressed in PVC. Because of that, the lead-in and lead-out grooves can carry more audible surface noise than factory pressed vinyl.
This is normal for the format and does not reflect the quality of the music grooves themselves. The aim is always the best possible balance of clean playback, stable tracking and strong sound once the programme starts.
The silent lead-in and run-out areas often reveal the physical nature of a lathe cut more than the music section does. This is expected and is part of the handmade process.
My priority is always the best balance between level, sound quality and reliable playback. If your files need shaping to track well on vinyl, I will flag that before cutting. Some tracks are already in a good place. Others need a bit of high-frequency control or general prep to get the best result.