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Another issue is that PLL direct drive systems used to lock into a Quartz signal, are dependent on the ineraction between torque of the motor and mass of the platter...If the platter is too heavy, it will speed up insufficiently and require additional pushes - making the whole process uneven, and introducing the potential for the "jitter" than some SL1200 tweakers describe (mostly when talking about PSU mods for the technics tables)Same problem if the platter is too light...The intricacies of determining how much latitude a specific motor and control system has for additional mass is a mystery to me - I am aware of the issue and its potential impact, but do not have the theoretical understanding, let alone the relevant measurement tools to investigate and tweak this aspect....I think this is a high risk area, where a lot of tweakers have gone down the path of using heavy TT weights - with potentially subtle negative effects. (and due to psycho acoustics, it can be VERY difficult to pin down subtle effects...)I have added a small amount of mass to my Revox platter in the form of plasticine on the underside as a minor damping treatment, and I use a BIB Clamp rather than a massy (messy?) weight.I do like the idea and sound of the stability provided by huge inertia, but have issues with the idea of a 200lb+ turntable..... it somehow just lacks elegance.bye for nowDavid
First of all, lets set this straight about the Technics SL1200(MKII). It was not a "disco" table that found its way into the home, it was the other way around. I have 3 DD tables, and 5 belt drive tables and there is no detectable difference in PRAT or wow and flutter between any of them, and I am very sensitive to speed issues.I also wonder why people think that the record itself doesn't have flaws. Analog recordings were made on a reel to reel recorder, which certainly can have speed variations, then the multi-channel recording is recorded to another 2 channel reel to reel which can have more speed issues, then to a cutting machine to create the master lacquer. So before the music even turns into a vinyl record, it has many opportunities to become corrupt.Wayner
OK so if we apply this test to a tonearm we'll get an ellipsoid around the arm's centre of gravity - approximately around the pivot of the arm. Now project the ellipsoid forward to the stylus so an ellipse surrounds the stylus and you'll have a representation of all the forces acting on the stylus, and by the way, to the arm cartridge combination. See diagram.The perfect arm would have the ellipse as a circle with the stylus tip in its centre. That means that the stylus will move equally easily up, down and left/right. Neutrality is complete.If the ellipse is flat then the system is not neutral, it is easier for the stylus to go up and down than left to right. In this case the combination of the arm's effective mass and cartridge compliance will give various frequencies of resonance rather than one which is easier to control. This is the design weakness of all air-bearing parallel-tracking arms, the resistance to up and down movement will be much like a bearing tonearm, but side to side will be much more difficult as the totality of the arm must move - around 20 times more difficult than vertical movement. Depending on the eccentricity of the record (no record is perfectly centred) the arm movement can take any direction and speed each time adding a different resonance. At best such arms can be symmetrical, at worse just crazy - by that I mean that to have an ellipse so distorted with the stylus way off centre - it means that all movements are different, adding different resonances, different behaviours etc.