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John, I appreciate your review. I have a request. If it's possible, could you expand your list of reference recordings. I'd like to be able to compare notes, but I don't have any of the records listed. Part of the trouble with a solitary hobby such as this, is that I'm not always sure of what I should/could be hearing. Don (grb)
I did this mod to my RB300, and it gave me excellent results. I have done this mod with lead fishing weights on my RB300 arm. Each weight is identical at 11.5 grams, I just made them the same weight. I slightly drilled them out to fit snuggly on the stainless acorn nuts. I then painted them black and superglued them on the nuts. I found this to be very beneficial. It increased the silence and the sound stage as well. It also gave me great tracking, although I had to decrease the anti-skate.Cheers, Plastico
It's certainly a far cry from John's 200g/side SME mod. neo
I've been thinking about the idea of adding mass someplace other than the plane of the lateral pivots. Not sure how the physics works. Mass added down the arm somewhere will add to vertical mass (at least to some extent), but could be counterproductive laterally on a pivoting arm. The arm tube is usually set at an angle that's not 90o from the plane of the lateral pivots so you'd possibly be setting mass at, or creating another force vector.A longhorn is on the cart and whether the front or back, is perpendicular to the groove. This should stabilize the cart, but I don't know how it will affect lateral mass on any type arm. I suspect most if not all of the affect will be vertical. neo
Yes, any mass added anywhere on a linear tracker will add directly gram for gram to the lateral eff mass. (might help to think of linears as pivoted arms with the horizontal direction pivot as being infinitely far away, therefore any mass added is as if AT the cart end of the arm) If it was added to the linear motion assembly only then it would only affect lateral eff mass. Mass added to the vertically pivoted arm would add lateral eff mass AND in a ratio to its location along the arm to the cart, would add to the vert eff mass. Per previous calculations I'm betting it would take a lot of mass to adversely affect lateral tracking function - based purely on mass/inertia. However, adding mass to some linear trackers could also significantly increase the friction in the bearing system, leading to increased tracking problems.My 2x10 to the minus 8 mega-bux worth...Cheers, John
Hi Folks,A weakness in my above statements on linear trackers: I failed to distinguish between two significant classes...1) Free floating or self tracking - are arms that ride on light friction linear bearings, such as air bearing slides or precision rollers on nice guideways - such that side forces on the stylus are what drives the linear motion. (A few manufacturers with product in this area: Clearaudio, Eminent, Walker, Magne)2) Active or servo driven - designs that are driven linearly by a mechanism of some type that keeps the arm pivot (for both vertical and horizontal) moving in a linear fashion to about exactly follow the cart's progress across the record radial line. (A few manufacturers with product in this area: Bang & Olufsen, Revox, Sony, Technics)My remarks quoted were entirely addressed to class 1) above. Based on the designs I've seen, it might be quite difficult to impossible to add lateral effective mass only to designs in class 2).Sorry about the missing detail there. Yers, John