Vinyl Matrix Number Meaning (How to Read Deadwax)

Use this collector-friendly checklist to decode the deadwax/runout and understand what matrix numbers typically encode—then verify the right pressing (and value context) with examples and real comps.

Macro view of the runout groove (deadwax) on a vinyl record
Tip: use raking light and rotate the disc to make faint marks readable.

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On a vinyl record, the smooth band between the last track and the label is the deadwax (also called the runout groove). It looks empty at first — but it’s where pressing plants and cutting engineers leave the breadcrumbs that tell you which cut you have, and sometimes where it was pressed.

Collectors call those inscriptions the matrix or runout markings. The exact format varies by label, country, and era, so there is no single universal decoder — but there is a reliable way to read and verify what you see.

If your end goal is “is this a first pressing?”, use this page to decode the deadwax, then follow our first-press workflow: How to tell if a vinyl record is a first pressing.

10-minute deadwax reading checklist (start here):

  1. Clean the runout area: a microfiber cloth removes haze that hides faint etching.
  2. Use raking light: hold a flashlight low to the surface and rotate the record slowly.
  3. Photograph both sides: take angled shots until the characters “pop” in the glare line.
  4. Transcribe exactly: include hyphens, dots, slashes, and spacing — don’t “correct” it.
  5. Separate stamped vs etched: note which characters are machine-stamped and which are hand-etched.
  6. Decode the big pieces first: catalog/side + obvious cut number, then smaller initials/symbols.
  7. Verify with two sources: match runout and label/jacket details to documented photos.
  8. Only then compare prices: comps should match the same pressing/variant, not just the same title.

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Deadwax decoder decision tree

Use this flow to avoid the two most common mistakes: guessing from one character, or ignoring label/jacket evidence.

Decision tree for decoding a vinyl deadwax matrix number and verifying a pressing
Workflow: locate deadwax → transcribe exactly → decode cut/plant clues → verify against documented photos.

What a matrix number is (and isn’t)

A “matrix number” isn’t a universal date stamp. Treat it as a production identifier tied to a specific cut and manufacturing chain.

What you see in deadwax What it often means How to use it
Catalog / matrix core Main identifier for the release or side Match it to the label and jacket catalog number
Side marker (A/B, 1/2) Which side of the record Transcribe both sides separately; mismatched sides are common
Cut or lacquer number Which cut of the lacquer (e.g., a recut) Helpful for “first cut vs later cut” discussions — not universal
Mastering initials / notes Clues about who cut it (sometimes) or where Use as supporting evidence when documented in reference photos
Pressing plant symbols/codes Clues about where it was pressed Confirm with known runout patterns; don’t guess from one letter
Plating/mother/stamper codes Internal manufacturing identifiers Can indicate early vs later metal parts, but conventions vary

Tools and photo setup that make deadwax readable

You don’t need lab equipment — just the right angle and a repeatable photo method.

  • Flashlight: a small LED held low (raking light) reveals shallow etchings.
  • Phone camera: shoot at a slight angle; try several rotations of the disc.
  • Magnification: a 10× loupe helps with tiny initials and faint stamps.
  • Clean hands + cloth: fingerprints and haze hide the light-catching scratch lines.

Best practice: take several angled photos per side.

How to transcribe deadwax (so you can verify later)

The most valuable skill here is not “knowing the code” — it’s recording the code accurately so you can compare it to documented photos. When transcribing, treat the deadwax like a password: every character matters.

  • Write Side A and Side B separately; don’t merge them into one line.
  • Keep punctuation (hyphens, dots, slashes). If you’re unsure, photograph again instead of guessing.
  • Note which parts are stamped (uniform) vs etched (hand-scribed).

Side letters and cut numbers: A/B, -1/-2, A1/B1, 1A/1B

Collectors love shorthand like “A1/B1,” but it only helps when you know the label’s convention. In some systems it can suggest an early cut; in other systems it’s simply a bookkeeping format. Later pressings can also reuse early stampers, so an “early-looking” cut code doesn’t automatically mean “first pressing.”

Practical rule: treat side/cut numbers as one clue. The more valuable questions are “does the complete runout match the documented pressing?” and “do the label + jacket details match the same edition?”

Mastering initials and plant marks: “who cut it” vs “who pressed it”

Many records include both: a tiny etching that hints at the cutting/mastering chain, and a symbol or stamp that hints at the pressing plant. These are some of the most useful “tie-breakers” when the label art looks identical across multiple runs.

Tip: plant symbols can be extremely small, and initials can be faint. Photograph both sides at multiple angles and compare to reference photos rather than relying on memory.

Lacquer, mother, stamper: why extra codes show up

Vinyl records aren’t pressed directly from the lacquer — metal parts are created first (often described as “mother/stamper” steps). That means additional identifiers can appear as a record moves through manufacturing. Some plants also add internal control marks.

How to verify a pressing (without guessing)

  1. Start with what’s printed: label + catalog number + country + jacket construction.
  2. Confirm the runout pattern: the whole deadwax (not one character) should match documented photos for the same release.
  3. Be cautious with user-entered databases: they’re useful, but typos happen — photos are your best proof.
  4. Watch for mismatched parts: swapped discs, swapped jackets, and “Frankenstein” sets are common in used collections.

If you're specifically hunting a first pressing (or an early cut that commands a premium), use this companion checklist: Vinyl first pressing deadwax/matrix guide.

Deadwax red flags (how people get burned)

  • No deadwax photos in a listing: sellers often avoid showing runout details when variants are uncertain.
  • Only one side matches: side A looks right, side B is a later recut or a different country.
  • Sloppy or suspicious scratch marks: altered/over-scribed runouts can be a counterfeit signal (not always, but worth extra checks).
  • “A1/B1” claims without context: shorthand is not proof without the full runout and label/jacket match.

Why deadwax matters for value (with auction comps)

The market pays premiums for specific variants — and variants are often separated by deadwax/runout details. But keep expectations realistic: a common title doesn’t become valuable just because the runout looks “low.” Value comes from rarity + demand + condition + completeness.

Recent comps from Appraisily’s internal auction results database:

  • Archives International Auctions (Apr 18, 2024), Lot 280: Beatles “Yesterday and Today” third state “Butcher Cover” mono LP — hammer $425.
  • Bodnar’s Auction Sales (Jan 4, 2024), Lot 284: lot of 16 Beatles vinyl records — hammer $675.
  • Bodnar’s Auction Sales (Jan 4, 2024), Lot 285: The Beatles Collection LP set (“blue box”) — hammer $450.

Why it matters: match comps to the same pressing/variant whenever possible.

Auction photo of Beatles Yesterday and Today third state Butcher Cover mono LP (Archives International Auctions lot 280)
Archives International Auctions, Lot 280 (Apr 18, 2024) — $425 hammer.
Auction photo of a lot of Beatles vinyl records (Bodnar’s Auction Sales lot 284)
Bodnar’s Auction Sales, Lot 284 (Jan 4, 2024) — $675 hammer.
Auction photo of The Beatles Collection LP vinyl record set in blue box (Bodnar’s Auction Sales lot 285)
Bodnar’s Auction Sales, Lot 285 (Jan 4, 2024) — $450 hammer.

What to photograph for pressing identification (or appraisal)

  • Front + back of the jacket (straight-on), plus spine close-up.
  • Label close-ups for both sides (including rim text).
  • Deadwax photos for both sides at multiple angles.
  • Any inserts, hype stickers, or unusual inner sleeves.

Deadwax inspection gallery

Quick visual references for what you’re trying to photograph. (AI-generated illustrations.)

Using raking light from a low-angle flashlight to read vinyl deadwax markings
Raking light reveals shallow etching.
Deadwax location on a vinyl record between the last track and the label
Where to look: between the last groove and the label.
Example of etched and stamped characters in vinyl deadwax
Etched + stamped marks can appear together.
Side marker and cut sequence in vinyl deadwax
Side/cut marker: useful, not proof by itself.
Tiny mastering initials etched in deadwax
Initials: a useful fingerprint when verified.
Small pressing plant mark stamped in deadwax
Plant mark: often small and easy to miss.
Record manufacturing chain parts including lacquer and metal plates
Manufacturing context: extra codes can appear.
Suspicious scratchy deadwax etching that looks altered
Red flags: uneven scratch marks warrant extra checks.

Related guides

Keep exploring: Music Memorabilia · Vinyl Records.

Search variations collectors ask

Readers often Google:

  • how to read deadwax matrix numbers on a vinyl record
  • what does A1 B1 mean in deadwax
  • etched vs stamped matrix numbers meaning
  • how to identify pressing plant marks in the runout groove
  • what do mastering initials in deadwax mean
  • how to decode vinyl runout groove inscriptions
  • can deadwax tell you if it's a first pressing
  • what photos to take for vinyl pressing identification
  • how to spot counterfeit vinyl by deadwax markings

Each question is answered in the guide above.

Key takeaways

  • Deadwax is the production breadcrumb trail — but the format varies by label, country, and era.
  • Transcribe exactly (both sides) and verify with documented photos before paying a premium.
  • Etched vs stamped differences can matter; the combination is often the identifier.
  • Matrix/runout details help value comparisons because they identify the exact variant buyers want.

References & data sources

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