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I'm pretty sure I've posted this before, but here it is again ...Anti skate can be set by ear. Find a record with some vocals and some decent micro-dynamics. Then set the force to zero. This works best with someone helping you, but you can do it yourself if you're patient. Listen to the right channel and you should hear it almost lower in dynamic volume than the left (a bit recessed). Slowly turn the tracking force up, I mean very slowly a wee bit at a time. Eventually you should start to hear the right channel coming up and getting closer to what the left channel is producing dynamically. Then as you get higher you should hear both channels sounding more dynamic and just better and better. Move the anti-skate up very slowly now.At last you will hear a fairly dramatic drop off in the quality of both channels. You have now gone a wee bit too far. Back it off a notch and you have optomized your anti-skate.Enjoy,Bob
Do you do this on the first track of your chosen record? If so, then how does the last track of the same record side usually sound?
So neo, your saying that setting AS could actually be fun (with the right Rx).......Maybe the right answer is what ever sounds good to your own ears. However, I'm not going to reset my anti-skate thru various parts of the record and keep a log book. That sound like a worse O/C disorder then mine.....
Another post of yours which convinces me you are in the know! Andy
Maybe I'm not OCD enough to be an audiophile, but I am enjoying the debate. My cartridge manufacturer states that anti-skate should be approx 1/2 VTF, which is around .9 . My TT manufacturer states time is better spent listening to music than fooling with AS. It's working for me.Doc
I agree with everyone:1. Skating force changes across the disc2. Any method is a compromiseFrank Schroder, German tonearm maker, recommends the following (if I remember correctly): using a blank disc, set the A/S force such that the stylus tracks very slowly toward the center of the record. How slow is slow? Slow!
The VPI tonearms have a certain amount of anti-skate force even without using the optional anti-skate mechanism which Harry currently includes but recommends against using. The inherent a/s force in these arms is provided by tension in the wire that comes out of the top of the bearing housing and loops to the connection box. The amount of twist in this wire varies its stiffness and will determine the resulting a/s force. This is all explained in the VPI manual.
Frank Schroder, German tonearm maker, recommends the following (if I remember correctly): using a blank disc, set the A/S force such that the stylus tracks very slowly toward the center of the record. How slow is slow? Slow!
Paul Lederman from Soundsmith