RB300 tweaking problem


I have an RB300 mounted on a Townshend Rock Mk. III. This turntable incorporates a damping trough at the cartridge. To use this trough, a outrigger assembly is mounted at the headshell. The RB300 came from Townshend. It came with the tungsten CW w/ an additional weight epoxied to it to offset the added mass of the outrigger. The diameter of the hole on the additional weight is larger than the shaft. Its weight is being supported by the tungsten cw.

I am using the latest Shelter 501.

I thought I would try one of the cw upgrades. I went with the Mitchell. The problem that I am having is that in order to load the cartridge at 1.8 grams, the center of the main weight is a full 2" behind the pivot.

Any suggestions here? Should I add more mass to the Mitchell? If so, how?

Thanks for any help.
smctigue

Showing 4 responses by tafka_steve

You can move the weight closer to the pivot if you have an external tracking force gauge. Set the Rega spring gauge tracking force to zero, then move the counterweight to apply the tracking force measured on an external gauge. The disadvantage of this method is that the Rega spring is actually at its maximum tension to maximize upward force at the 0 gram setting, and this may color the sound.
>>The tracking force is set at 3.5. According to the Mitchell literature, doing so deactivates the spring.<<

Correct. The spring applies upward force in Rega arms, not a downward force. But deactivating the spring means that you have to move the counterweight further from the pivot. If you want to operate with the spring deactivated, you'll have to add more mass to the counterweight to move it closer to the pivot.

FWIW, I use a Expressimo Heavyweight on my Townshend-modified Rega and with the Lyra Helikon tracking at 1.8 g. I have the counterweight hanging off the end of the arm tube as far as it can go. If I used a heavier cartridge or more tracking force, I'd have to add mass to the Heavyweight.
Honestly, I can barely detect the sonic difference (slightly cleaner transient/dynamic peaks with the Heavyweight). I think the front-end damping paddle/trough of Townshend's arms removes arm resonance colorations (certainly the tonearm/cartridge resonant peak is nullified) and this is why the difference is so minor.
I bought an extra vial of damping fluid from Townshend back in 2001. He should still have some, as he is still making turntables that use the damping trough (according to HFNRR). If you have no luck with him, I can probably supply you with some.

FYI, the Townshend has been in my second (bedroom) system for 4 years. I went nuts and bought a Walker Proscenium with a Dynavector XV-1 to replace it in my primary system. And yes, it was worth it.