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ah yes, but no matter how perfectly u set up the needle , the tonearm etc,, you will still be damaging your vinyl, every time you play it , thats why i was curious whcih tonearm damages vinyl least,, ive heard the straight can ride the inner groove of the record harder thus wearing it out faster,
I'd be more concerned with your cartridge then your arm. A cartridge that requires a lighter tracking force will wear your LPs a lot less than one that requires more force.
especially if it's a spherical shaped stylus, elliptical is better, fine-line type is best. more surface area contact spreads out the total force.
ive read staright is best for scratching(which i wont be doing) , whould i get it any way, what other advamtages migh the staright posses.
A conical stylus actually presents a larger footprint in the groove compared with an elliptical (and a line-contact will have a bigger footprint than a conical), so the pressure per square inch is reduced. A 1964 study found that a .7 mil conical causes no more wear at 3 grams than a small elliptical (e.g., .2 X .7 mil) tracking at 1.5 grams. I found these comparisons at another forum site:A 0.7mil spherical stylus (18um radius where the stylus contacts the groove) has a contact area of 30.5um(sq.) - one wall. A 0.5mil spherical stylus (13um radius where the stylus contacts the groove) has a contact area of 23.4um(sq.) - one wall. A 0.3x0.7mil elliptical stylus (18umx6um radii where the stylus contacts the groove) has a contact area of 20.6um(sq.) - one wall. A line-contact stylus (45umx6um radii where the stylus contacts the groove) has a contact area of 46.7um(sq.) - one wall. A microridge stylus (75umx2.5um radii where the stylus contacts the groove) has a contact area of 62.1um(sq.) - one wall. http://db.audioasylum.com/cgi/m.mpl?forum=vinyl&n=373893