0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 30826 times.
Frank is the man. I got around to ordering and receiving the Grado Green. It was tempting to go with a higher priced model, but in my old age I'm beginning to take direction well from those I trust. And Frank has made a career of being right.
The guys at tower hobbies said that this product was 1000 cst silicone oil and it appears to work. However, it may not be as good as the medical grade products. Tower sells it for lubricating RC car differentials. A small bottle (lifetime supply) for <$7.00.
Aw Frank, sorry to hear about the pain! Here's hoping it doesn't last.I downloaded and printed the 1982 issue of Audio Basics where you talk about the Longhorn and about proper cartridge loading. Unfortunately, the calculations on page 7 printed over the text in column two and are difficult to decipher. Would you please post them here? The manufacturer of my cartridge recommends a 100ohm load but I just wanted to double check. Thanks!
I very recently actually sent all the build info on the Longhorn Grado to John Grado at Grado Labs, including photos. All I wanted was my name mentioned if they used the ideas themselves - or maybe $1.00 per cartridge sold? (Very greedy on my part )All I got back was a terse e-mail saying "they were not interested".Geeze the NIH syndrome is everywhere. I guess they are simply not interested in trying something that actually works for good engineering reasons.Perhaps if you bombarded them with a few user letters?Frank Van Alstine
Just found this yesterday...courtesy of Hagerman Technology.A wonderful resource - many thanks to Jim Hagerman for this!http://www.hagtech.com/loading.html
The guys at tower hobbies said that this product was 1000 cst silicone oil and it appears to work. However, it may not be as good as the medical grade products. Tower sells it for lubricating RC car differentials. A small bottle (lifetime supply) for <$7.00.http://www2.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin/wti0001p?&I=LXKKE3&P=7#tech
Frank, 10,000/20,000/30,000 cst are the usual recommendations for tonearm troughs by most manufacurers that I've read....100,000 or 300,000 for damped cueing levers. 1000 cst would seem to little to effect much good in damping a 9" wand of whatever material it's made from (steel, plastic, aluminum, carbon, etc).http://www.turntablebasics.com/silicone.html