Hi Mike,
I've found that damping the arm to VPI's recommendations works much better than using no oil. Using the supplied oil, fill the cup about halfway, then seat the arm. Give it a minute and lift the arm, if you can see a thin strand of oil lifting up with the arm, then you know that you have sufficient damping. If no oil, add a tad more, until you get the thin strand upon the lift test. Go slowly, and do not overfill the cup.
I've had my 10.5 for a couple years now, and it is a great tonearm when properly setup. The proper damping did make a significant improvement.
Cheers,
John
I've found that damping the arm to VPI's recommendations works much better than using no oil. Using the supplied oil, fill the cup about halfway, then seat the arm. Give it a minute and lift the arm, if you can see a thin strand of oil lifting up with the arm, then you know that you have sufficient damping. If no oil, add a tad more, until you get the thin strand upon the lift test. Go slowly, and do not overfill the cup.
I've had my 10.5 for a couple years now, and it is a great tonearm when properly setup. The proper damping did make a significant improvement.
Cheers,
John