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Wood is a preferred headshell material because it doesn't resonate or transmit vibrations like metal, and it's rigid. Quite different application than the body of a guitar or violin which is a sort of speaker box/sounding board for the instrument. Did you even read my post? The neck of my Martin guitar is made of maple, and it transmits vibrations the beat hell, hence, the Snark works very well determining what frequency it "feeling", so your transmission theory is out the window. The "doesn't resonate" thing is also iffy, as it depends on how thick the wood is. I said wood doesn't seem to have resonance frequencies (and then the harmonics of them).Making a headshell out of wood is also an "iffy" idea to me, as wood can expand and contract with temperature and the density may change with humidity changes.Pretty non-convincing.Wayner
The Music Direct catalog says it's ebony, "a sophisticated ebony tonearm" found on page 11.Sorry for the correction on the correction. And the table has not always received good reviews.Wayner
It's really not important to the discussion anyway.Wayner
I just think it's proper to always recognize the author of a quote (probably a legal requirement as well) otherwise some may think it's plagiarism. Enough of that.Sure, wood is probably better then concrete or even sheet rock as buffer for a room, but that's a different application then using it for tonearm components. There have been several wood tonearms, like the Grado for example, and the current Marantz has an ebony arm, but it doesn't get that good of reviews, and the Grado arm is all but extinct.And then to top it all off, the old cheapie AR-XA(XB) turntable, with it's aluminum arm and cheap plastic head shell probably can sonically beat a very expensive VPI table. This is where theorys by PHD guys gets all muddied up. The AR table is almost a contradiction of everything discussed here, but there it is (properly set up of course), playing records like it's nobodies business, pissing off some PHD guy cause it's not supposed to sound that good. In our world of infinite possibilities, there is more then one way to "skin a cat". Like in the show, the Big Bag Theory, they like to "do the math" on stuff like this, and good for them. But in another, more practical way, others like the real world of trial and error. While this process may take longer, the results can have big rewards.Wayner