Turntable Problems


My father purchased a turntable recently (VPI HW-19 Mk 3 with Sumiko arm, don't know which one). I have had it in my system until his new shelf is completed to hold the turntable (very big unit). The crtridge is a Grado Reference Platinum. My equipment stand is not big enough for the unit so I put it on a footstool nearby (I know it is a bad placement but I didn't have anything else to use temporarily). It sounds good but whenever there is anything that is really high freqency or very dynamic in the upper range, the unit starts making weird noises that are kind of static-like. It sounds like the stylus is skipping (but that is a guess). It happens on multiple records, some of them being virgin lp's. Does anyone have a guess as to why that is happening? Thanks!
128x128nhorton
Recheck the cartridge set-up. It could be mistracking. Check to make sure the turntable platter is flat (use a bubble gauge). Alternatively, your cartridge could be overloading your phono stage. The manufacturers' literature should tell you how to optimize.
I use the Grado Reference Platinum in my office system (Oracle Alexandria and stock arm). No problems at all, nice sound. Turntables are finicky beasts, re-check everything, there's bound to be something out of whack that needs a little tweaking.
I am pretty sure your cartridge alignment angle is wrong. So please set up the cartrigdge again. Please do not play the Lps until the alignment is correct otherwise the LP will be damaged forever.
Check the tracking force,alignment,and overhang. It sounds like mistracking to me.