Thanks,
I’ll try less anti-skate but the cart is set at 2 g as requested.
The website linked to is interesting, thanks. According to it the cart/arm system should work well.
M
Tonearm/Cartridge pairing.
Hello to everybody.
My turntable’s tonearm has a mass of 15.6 g (cane + head shell). My cartridge weighs 6.9 g. If I calculate the effective mass of the tonearm the way the maker did (arm’s mass with head shell + cart + tracking force) I get a global 24.5 g mass. The arm + shell mass is 15.5 (15.6 actually); the head shell weighs 10.1g.
My cartridge’s static compliance is rated 20mm/N (I ignore whether it’s @10Hz or 100Hz).
Will someone more experienced than I am please tell me if the cart and the tonearm are suited to each other statically? My cart (Goldring E3) did fine on a friend’s turntable (rega P2) but seems a little ill at ease on mine (Technics SL-1510, ca. 1978).
Opinions welcome,
Thanks
M.
The Goldring E3 is a FANTASTIC cartridge! I've been touting it on here for awhile now. Everyone should get to hear one. It's really something special. Should work fine with the Technics, however, it's really owed a nice headshell. I'm assuming you're using the stock Technics headshell? PLEASE get a decent aftermarket headshell, (and wires if the headshell doesn't come with any good ones). The cart deserves it. |
The korfaudio.com/calculator showed that my arm/shell/cart system works well within the safe rage. |
@martinguitars , Never assume the settings on a pre calibrated arm are accurate. Always measure. Same holds for specifications which is why a test record (HiFi News Analog Test Record) is so important. Never assume. Measure! The bearings on a tonearm can get pretty bad before you can notice it by feel. There is no easy way to tell if they are OK. The WallySkater is the only way I know of and it is $250. |