0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 13335 times.
That's how I set my anti-skate and it's always spot on. Fast, cheap and easy.
Audio by Van Alstine has a blank disk as part of a really nice turntable setup kit. Designed by our own Wayner!http://www.avahifi.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=248&Itemid=245Paul
It's my opinion you would over compenstate.Doc
It's always going to be the search for the philosophers stone for the 'right' way to align a cartridge.
Sorry to disagree with you gents on this topic. the forces at work on the stylus are the same in the groove as they are on a flat plane. It's the offset angle and VTF that set the staking in motion. I also suspect, but can't confirm that stylus type may play a role as well.Many customers have reported back to me on the ACT disc, and have said that after they used it, and then tried a calibration groove on a test record, the results were almost identical. I have been using this technique for many years and I know that it works. Stereo balance is excellent, record wear is greatly reduced, groove chatter simply doesn't happen.The problem with using the blank disc is that people set the anti-skating correction in the wrong area of the disc, and I certainly not going to tell you where, but a little secret is that it has something to do with both physics and geometry.In the end, the ears are always the final solution to any TT adjustments. Setting anti-skate according to the table or arm's makers is simply a crap shoot. Arms very from deck to deck. Why? It depends on the technique used to create the anti-skating forces. Some use springs, others use dead-man weights, others used a spacing of magnets. They all have tolerances from manufacturing, and in the case of springs and magnets, may see the effects of aging.While the blank disc may not be the final solution, it certainly gets the arm in the very close vicinity.And you are right, there is lots of art to the turntable science. It's also good to have some knowledge and tools to help you bring the set-up to a logical, one step closer existence.Wayner
Wasn't that the linear tracker??