Looking for help with a Vintage Black Widow arm.


Do any other arm experts use this arm? Plus, I need a SME mounting base, or template to make one. Would like to hear comments on the arm, as well. I have had great results with both high (and surprising) and low compliance cartridges.

Peter
breuninger

Showing 1 response by timeltel

Infinity engineering intended the arm to have as little influence on the cartridge as possible. Marketing offered the thought "as if suspended in air". I had to have one. Infinity literature shows it wearing a Denon 103 but a cartridge with compliance too low may throw the arm around and damage your lp's. I am probably wrong, but think perhaps the arm was made in the U.S., maybe Detroit?
Mine tracks very nicely, is gratifyingly musical with a high compl. cartridge but I think can become a little too warm with the wrong pickup, it really likes bass. Absurdly low arm mass and vertical bearing friction. Every one I have seen has lateral movement in the knife bearings. AT's sound like a good choice. The aluminum arm on mine (went to CF with a damping trough in 1979) tends to microphone physical disturbances to the turntable but remains resistant to feedback. Although I recently replaced it with a low-mass Technics arm, I am keeping the B.W., it would be a choice selection for many vintage turntable builds, Kenwood, AR, etc., I am glad to have it. Please don't take the dates or place of manufacture as fact.
Plenty of SME stuff on that auction site.