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Yes i suspected it was delrin , its too soft hence it wont true up , there is a certain hardeness required the one you have is too soft, i do recall different levels of hardness with delrin for machining ...Regards
Grb,I don't know much about fabricating capstans, but I saw that Premotec makes some motors designed for turntables. Couldn't you buy a capstan the appropriate size? If you increase platter mass you might need the extra torque, depending on how much mass. I saw a few companies like Newark Electronics that sell these motors, but I didn't find capstans.neo
Interesting that the top models were Boron rather than Beryllium.... (were they tubes rather than rods?)On the subject of the AT22 to AT25, although they were all eliptical, their upmarket signet twins had ML's at the top of the line...The AT22-25 and TK9/10 were a generation earlier, they were more expensive to make due to having true torroidal construction... all the rest of the VM series have always used para-torroidal design - so the earlier generation were magnetically superior - but the difference may have been very minor.The shorter cantilever on the ATML series made a bigger difference I think, than the torroidal structure on the earlier series...Seems to me the ATML180 is up there as one of the all time greats.My own measurements of the TK9 show a noticeable midrange trough (not a bad one, but not the best I have seen either) - which is caused (I think) by a combination of magnetic losses and cantilever flex losses - the low inductance is reflected in the high end rise to a resonance beyond the audio range (cannot recall right now the frequency - would have to look up my measurements).The higher inductance of the ATML allows it to achieve a flatter frequency response at the high end - would love to get my hands on one to measure - and see what the midrange trough looks like... I have a feeling it will/would do better than the earlier series or the AT150 - mostly due to the shorter cantilever.In the Stantering family, the D7500 stylus shows a 3db trough when fitted to a high inductance body, and a 1db trough when fitted to a low inductance body... so magnetic differences can be quite substantial (and get worse as signal rises - the test tracks are at -20db) - the trade off is the flatter overall frequency response with reduced high end rise.... But given the greater importance of the midrange, the XLZ body ends up sounding better than the high inductance XSV... although on the chart, the XSV looks better/flatter.
Is the polarity marked?...It has a hefty output (3mV) for a HOMC. Do you load it at 47K ? Do the instructions say > 1000 ohms?... AFAIK, this is another broadcast classic for heavy arms, but all the mono carts seem to be heavy trackers. Do you have old pressings (before 1960) or mostly newer pressings?
Hi Halcro,"With only about 6 hours on it so far.....the differences this cartridge makes over a 'mono' button on the phonostage or preamp are significant..not so much with the Beatles mono set (perhaps because they were cut with stereo heads).....but with all my other mono recordings, I sit in disbelief.."Pertinent comment. Right now I have one preamp with a mono switch and for the other room I have an AT-12E with the phony Precept stylus, and the channels strapped. Outside of impedance considerations they're effectively the same type of summed mono. There's still vertical output mixed in. I almost never use the 12E. I don't use it for stereo so it requires set-up. I saw the 33MONO listed. I think it has the same .65mil stylus as the MONO3LP. How do you load it? Specifically, 100 to 275 ohms? I have mostly "modern" jazz reissues, pressed in the '70s and '80s. Some are Japanese and I'm not sure if they will be better with a cart with more advanced tip like the Ortofon Cadenza Mono (fine line). In other words, pressed with a stereo cutter like the Beatles mono? Cadenza is around $1K. They also have a Quintet Mono (elliptical) - $525. I'll have to think about it awhile. There are also preamp considerations. neoP.S. Nice photo. 3 armed Denon?