0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 12915 times.
Now the difficult question - what about W&F?
There are various things that impact W&F - including arm damping...but you cannot really work on it to improve it without a reliable consistent way of measuring it...there have recently been discussions on both AK and VE about W&F measurement methods....
What a great idea. If no objections, I'll try to expand on the testing this weekend as I have the following measurement tools available:Kuzma StrobiPlatterspeed with 3150 test trackAndroid RPM Calculator AppTurntabulator for iPhoneI'll run them all and post the results. The two tools I don't have are an old fashioned strobe disc or a Sutherland Timeline.
I used Adjust+ and Platterspeed (iPhone 6) and got the same results. So I believe Platterspeed can be considered accurate.
Stylus drag?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RF2XieUlzvkhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RE52bsIh_ZAneo
There us a way of measuring stylus drag without additional fancy equipment. I use my KAB strobe UNDER a clear record such as Lucinda Williams' West album. Play the record and use the strobe to evaluate the changes. Easy.
You're not really measuring stylus drag, you're measuring its affect on your table as a percentage of speed deviation. This might seem like technical nit picking, but stylus drag is friction not the end result. The same can be said for the Sutherland blue light thing. It displays deviation from absolute speed.While absolute speed can define an overall characteristic of a table (PRAT), pitch is relative. Musicians tune to a specific pitch whether it's absolutely correct or not. If their pitch is the same, one to the other, then they're playing in tune. What if they get on a gig and the piano is a little out of tune? They have to tune to the piano.Wow and flutter, instantaneous speed variations are more noticeable and its measurement is more complex. You can't really compare manufacturer specs because they use different weighting systems and nobody checks their validity. They can make up whatever numbers they choose, and they do. Sometimes they don't even specify how the numbers are derived. Both absolute speed and wow and flutter - speed deviations, are the Achilles' heel of record playing and one area where digital is superior. If you want a great sounding record player, I think you should start with rock-steady speed and build from there.neo