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seems like the screws would provide the needed coupling.i have a thin and quite firm strip of cork (cut from sheet of gasket material) between my headshell and the tonearm.not because i think it helps with sound, i don't think i noticed a difference with or without, but because the spacer gets my tonearm in a good sweet spot for me to adjust the VTA.if i had a plane that i could run my armboad through i'd just do that a few times and lose that cork spacer...
Ha! Lurne happens to have a degree in physics. All that stuff about the center of gravity an ellipsoid of inertia, is the real deal.neo
This is a spacer between your cart and the headshell? What kind of table and arm? Maybe the armboard could be lowered or a mat used to effectively do the same thing.neo
hallo again,i have 2 of the Goldmund Relief mats, and yes they make a huge differnce.nothing better that i have found. the last one i found for sale was sold for $800 i think.i am not sure that the Applied fidelity mat is of the same material.there is a newer material that is making the rounds in the turntable world that is similar to Methacrylate material.it is POM which is a short name for Polyoxymethylene.here is the Wikipedia page for it...... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyoxymethylenei have a Lurné TT and a couple of his tonearms, all unipivot.he really is a master at his art!regards,bas
yes. about 1-2mm of a firm cork material.it's an empire with a sumiko ft-3 arm.
I've had very good results with this thin vibration damping material from SmallParts.com. I used a pad between either my Grado Sonata or Garrott Optim FGS and VPI unipivot arm with obvious good effect. It's tough as rhino hide to cut, so you'll need a very sharp X-Acto knife and small drill bit to start the holes for the mounting hole slots you'll cut. Since upgrading my turntable & tonearm (Acoustic Signature Final Tool & Audiomods tonearm,) I've not taken the time to see how the vibration damping pad affects this combo.http://www.smallparts.com/vibration-damping-sheet-040-thickness/dp/B0015RVDOO/ref=sr_1_4?sr=1-4&qid=1302823618
I thought the Empire tables had a hole cut in the plinth, with no armboard. It would be easier to stick with what you're doing now if 2mm is enough. You could always get a thicker mat. I know Herbie sells lots of different thicknesses. It might be better if you don't use 2 mats, and just get 1 in the thickness you need. Make sure your spindle is tall enough to accommodate.neo
Speaking of Empire turntables and vibration.... I had an Empire 598III for many, many years and one tweak that really took it's performance up a notch was to install Black Diamond Racing carbon fiber feet in the plinth. I drilled three vertical holes in the upright MDF framing members, two in back and one in front. Then I coated the inside of the drill holes with epoxy and inserted threaded brass rod coated with grease. When the epoxy had set up, I unscrewed the threaded rods and then had threaded, epoxy reinforced mdf walls. I installed brass rods and the BDR footers and set everything up on a maple block plinth. The results were a much better performing turntable that was very close in performance to a stock original version VPI Scout.
yeah i have my 208 on some metal feetthought i'd go back to more original looking and some real solid rubber feetscrewed them to the bottomall my treble disappearedtook those rubber feet back off and my table still sits on those metal feet...
BTW, for those who have Japanese tables, most have 6mm bolts attached to the top of stock rubber feet. You should be able to substitute something like this with no problem. Some Sonys have 8mm bolts, and some others might have different sizes. Check first, if you're substituting.http://www.parts-express.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?Partnumber=240-698