Afraid not. At one time there were disc cutting machines made for home use; these were fairly popular in the 1940's and early fifties, but tape recorders wiped them out. They didn't record on vinyl, but on acetate-coated aluminum discs. The sound quality was only fair, and, of course, monophonic. A newly-engineered disc cutter that would give results acceptable to today's standards and at the same time be suitable for home use would cost a small fortune.
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Afraid not. At one time there were disc cutting machines made for home use; these were fairly popular in the 1940's and early fifties, but tape recorders wiped them out. They didn't record on vinyl, but on acetate-coated aluminum discs. The sound quality was only fair, and, of course, monophonic. A newly-engineered disc cutter that would give results acceptable to today's standards and at the same time be suitable for home use would cost a small fortune.