VPI doesen't believe in anti-skating. I don't have the exact same model that you do so I'm not sure what you mean with the filament. On mine, they say you can do a basic anti-skate adjustment by unplugging the tonearm cable, rotae it, and then plug it back in. Doing that puts some tension on the cable that acts as anti-skate. I tried it on mine, but it looked messed up, so I just put it back and left it alone. Keep in mind though, you have a better model than I do, so even though the design looks very similar, yours may have features that mine doesn't.
Anti-skating on VPI arm?
I have a new VPI Aries 3 with a 3D arm.
The manual does not describe how to set the anti-skating.
In fact, it suggests not using it at all.
There is a filament line that leads from the arm, behind the VTA tower, to a counterweight lever.
I can't find a setup that works. The filament either rubs against the tower or the counterweight is not accessible or the line is too short.
Should I relocate the filament attachment ring behind the counterweight?
Anyone figured this out?
The manual does not describe how to set the anti-skating.
In fact, it suggests not using it at all.
There is a filament line that leads from the arm, behind the VTA tower, to a counterweight lever.
I can't find a setup that works. The filament either rubs against the tower or the counterweight is not accessible or the line is too short.
Should I relocate the filament attachment ring behind the counterweight?
Anyone figured this out?
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