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The interconnects come out directly from the Rega arm shaft and they are Rega stock and they are shielded.Then, they go to the Bellari VP-129 phono stage.
I'm sorry for jumping in late, but the pictures that were shown of the broken tonearm wires also show some suspect soldering. In my opinion all of the solder connections look 'cold'. At least two of those 'joints' would be marginal at best. I think if your guy is any good with the soldering iron, your problem might just go away with the re-soldering.
Now, the tiny black ground wire that as to go out of the arm assembly, I will get some kind of slot, gutter so that it can come out, because everything is super tight.
Guy,The black wire was connected to the round junction at the bottom of the arm along with all the other wires. On the other side of that junction your tonearm interconnect wires are soldered. That junction is also strain relief. It prevents the wires getting pulled out and disconnected inside. I suggest using that connection and running a separate wire for ground, along with your interconnect. The only thing you have to do in order to use it, is disconnect that bridge between the ground connection and the one next to it (left channel ground). You can run the black wire out some slot, but you'll have to secure it to the bottom of the arm so it doesn't get disconnected. If that bridge on the connector can be severed, it will make a neater more secure job.neo
I was looking at the Bellari phono schematic and it appears that there is no capacitor located at the RCA input jack. It seems to me like there should be a 220pF cap, or at the very least a 100pF cap to limit the bandwidth and to match the high frequency peak found on most MM cartridges. After you get your arm wiring sorted out you should add a 220pF capacitor to the L & R input jacks and see if that helps. Even if it does not cure the FM problem, the sound quality should improve as the typical MM resonant peak will not be as prominent. (Less sibilant sounds, and more controlled, natural sounding.)If you don't want to solder a 220 pF cap at the input of each RCA jack (or across R1 and R18), you can solder the capacitors to a cheap RCA plug, and use a good RCA Y connector to attach the capacitor plugs in parallel with your tone arm RCA cable ends. (Similar to cartridge resistance loading, but in this case capacitance loading.)