A new way of adjusting anti skate!


I was looking at the Wallyskater, a $250 or so contraption used to set anti skate. https://www.wallyanalog.com/wallyskater  It is reputedly the most accurate way to set anti skate. Talking about fiddly. 

The appropriate figure is 9 to 11 percent of VTF. So if you are tracking at 2 grams you want 0.2 grams of anti skate.
My Charisma tracks at 2.4 grams so I should set the anti skate for 0.24 grams..................................Bright light!.
I readjusted the Syrinx PU3 to zero so that it was floating horizontally. I set up a digital VTF gauge on it's side at the edge of the platter so that the finger lift would be in the cross hairs, activated the anti skate and was easily able to adjust it to 0.24 grams. I started at 0.18 grams and just added a little more. Whatever you measure the anti skate from it has to be at the same radius as the stylus. If you do not have a finger lift at the right location you can tack a toothpick to the head shell and measure from that. As long as you have the whole affair balanced at zero you will be fine. Added cost $0.00 as long as you have a digital VTF gauge. 

I would not buy stock in Wallyskater.
128x128mijostyn

Showing 2 responses by 4krowme

 I am curious about something that I have witnessed with some TT/cartridge setups. When the needle is raised, I just barely see it flick to one direction. Would this possibly be an anti-skating issue?

Gentlemen, I am both enjoying and learning from this discussion. I wish that I had the mind to understand all of it. I am not joking. Discussions like this are valuable to me in other courses of mechanics. 

 It would be easy to assume one point of the discussion to be the end all, and then someone points out an overlooked fact and the discussion must either accept or deny the viability of that fact.

  Much appreciated from this reader. All the best>