Stylus shape and skating force


I've been owning a new Ortofon 2M Bronze for few days, and I owned an Ortofon 530 Mk II. Plus, I had the chance to try a couple of Clearaudio's (Beta and Virtuoso) and another bunch of entry level cartridges.
The latest have elliptical stili, while both the Ortofons have fine-line stili.
My turntable is a Clearaudio Emotion with Satisfy toneram (sapphire/ceramic bearings and magnetic antiskating).

The thing is: while Ortofon's fine-line stylus retrieves a higher level of details and keeps distortion to a minimum it appears to have a strange behavior.
A conical or elliptical stylus, when placed on a blank record (or at the beginning, in the lead-in area), behaves predictably: it just sits there floating in and out according to the antiskaing settings.

My Ortofon's, instead, literally "flies" towards the spindle, no matter how much antiskating I set. In fact, I can set it to a maximum and it will just slow the tonearm motion of a small fraction.
The problem comes when it's time to play a record: if the stylus is not lowered right into a groove, it's pushed so hard towards the center that it will skip even the first grooves for a couple of millimeters! So, instead of lowering it at the beginning of the record, and wait for the lead-in to make its job, I have to take great care and place it over the first grooves of the music. Which means I loose the first seconds of music. Quite annoying...

Now you might argue: you need to add more antiskating than allowed by your tonearm.
Not really. It tracks to 15 mN and according to the tonearm manual the antiskating has to be set to a minimum. My ears suggest me the same thing and even a test record tells me that maximum antiskating is totally wrong and the right value is close to the minimum (the test records, as usual, wants a bit more).

So what I have is a stylus that when into the grooves tracks wonderfully and is subjected to a regular skating force, but on unmodulated surfaces "feels" an enormous force leading it to the centre.

Anyone noticed the same problems with exotic stili, or can give me some hints on the possible causes (I don't think there's a solution..)?

Thank you in advance
nebelmeer80
Try lowering the tonearm slower.

It will give you more control of the stylus when it first makes contact with the record.
Agree completely with Kirkus and Audiofeil.

It doesn't sound to me like anything's wrong with your rig or your setup, though it can't hurt to check. Everything you described is normal, including the need for care when cueing.

Your new stylus probably has a sharper point than the previous ones, so it experiences more friction when lowered onto a spinning *flat* surface. More friction = more skating = ZOOM! goes the arm inward. Perfectly normal and perfectly irrelevant, as Kirkus explained.

BTW, your ears are correct - trust them. The less A/S you can use (consistent with clean tracking) the better your cartridge can do its job. A/S pulls outward on the arm, which presses the cantilever against the cartridge's soft, internal suspension. One guess how that effects HF extension, speed and the cantilever's ability to respond to the subtler waveforms in the groove. (Excessive VTF has the same effect, so you should set that by ear as well.)
Thanks to all those who replied, expecially to Kirkus and Doudgeacon who confirmed my thoughts.
I always thought that setting the antiskating on an ungrooved record was just useless, for the reasons you explained, but you know... after the millionth "tips & tricks for analogue" suggesting that, I just gave it a try. I can't really understand why so many people use and suggest that method.
I reckoned that it must have been related to the stylus shape, though I was thinking to a wider tip rather than sharper (wider = more contact surface -> more friction)
But what really matters is that we came to the conclusion that it's just the stylus shape. So I will live with it.
The problem is that Ortofon's quality, in my experience, isn't really up to their name. 2 out of 2 cartridges where delivered with a bent cantilever (the sound was dreadful) and had to return them... so in this situation when something appears weird it's difficult to understand if it is another defect or not.
Plus their stupid customer care policy which demands all the communication to the local distributor (who has no knowlegde of what he's selling) ain't of help at all.
This will probably be my last Ortofon, I'm looking for an Audiotechnica with Microline stylus as a replacement when its time will come.

Again, thanks to all and have a nice day
The problem is that Ortofon's quality, in my experience, isn't really up to their name. 2 out of 2 cartridges where delivered with a bent cantilever (the sound was dreadful) and had to return them...
That's really sad to hear. I used to set a lot of new Ortofons, and I would check each one under a microscope before it was installed . . . and 10-15 years ago, their quality control was way above average. The company has changed ownership and management in recent years, so maybe things have slipped, or you have simply had bad luck. Audio-Technica was about average, I would send back about one in every five AT-OC9s that I saw. Shure was horrible . . . I remember sending back 6 or 7 out of an order of ten V15-Vs at one point. These were mainly bent or twisted cantilevers, or styli that were mounted crooked on the end.

FWIW, the Ortofon fineline stylus is a really nice profile, so (QC issues aside) it should deliver excellent tracking performance for a long time.
The main reason your stylus shoots toward rapidly inward when you set it down is because the record has a thick bead on the edge. The stylus is literally falling off that bead (toward the label) and its momentum is carrying it too far inward. It sounds counter intuitive, but to avoid missing the first few notes of music, you should set the stylus down well inside of the bead, not as far toward the edge as possible. It appears you are now doing this, but setting it down just a bit too much inward. I would not try to set the stylus down near the edge, and I would also do what others have suggested, which is to cue the stylus much more slowly. Both slow cuing and not setting the stylus down too far toward the edge should cure your problem; if not, you have some other setup problem (not level, wrong setting of downforce, etc.

Aside from using specialized test gear, to me, the best way to set antiskating is to use something like the old Shure test records that have monophonic music being played at progressively higher volume. At some level, the cartridge will start to mistrack (signal becomes sibilant and broken up). Typically, the side of the groove experiencing lower tracking force will break up first or more severely. If it is the right channel that is mistracking the most, you would INCREASE antiskating in order to bring the right side of the stylus into better contact with the groove. If the left is mistracking more, than antiskating has been set too high. Using this approach, I almost always have found that tonearm manufacturer recommendations for antiskating force are too high -- you usually need less than recommended.