Playing Vinyl in a Cold Room


I have a question for vinyl lovers in this forum.
I always recognized that temperature influence on sound quality of playing vinyl.

The recommended temperature for my cartridge EMT TSD15 is 23C (73.5F).
My system is in the basement, and in some days a temperature drops there to 18.5 Celsius (65 F).
Playing vinyl in such low temperature causes bad tracking and more grainy, dry sound.
Does anyone have a similar experience?
Any idea how to solve this issue?
Should I try to change my tonearm settings - to lower VTA or higher VTF?

Regards,
Alex
alexberger

Showing 2 responses by mijostyn

No mc I doubt it. The mass of the elastomer is very low. It will revert to room temp very quickly. Alex just put ear muffs on it:) 
You need to put a radiant heater in the basement or move the system. I keep our house pretty cold in the Winter. No higher than 66 degrees. I have never noticed a problem with any of my cartridges. So, you might also consider getting another cartridge saving the EMT for warm Summer days. 
With a heater near the turntable you risk forming a temperature gradient across the record. This is how warps are made.