Why the woofer moves badly when playing certain LPs


Hello. First greeting.
My turntable is Pro-Ject The classic, Phono is Lejonklou Gaio2.4 and Cartridge is AT150sa.

However, I am having problems with my woofer moving badly when playing certain LPs.
Generally, this is not the case with the older, dusty LPs of the 80's, but rather with the record just new released LPs.

I want to get help from someone who knows why this is happening.
Sorry for my broken English.
Thank you very much.

starbusters
You need a subsonic filter in your phono stage like this one that has a RUMBLE setting  Gain-DIP switch settings on/off.
3.18 us off / 7950 us on DIP switches 7 & 8
http://www.wyetechlabs.com/preamps/phono/phono.html
@atmasphere Thanks for your comment. I enjoy reading your posts on various forums and consider you an expert on things audio. So it's with respect that I disagree with your comment: 
This statement is incorrect. If the mechanical resonance is corrected the amplitude of the woofer movement will be decreased.
The resonance mechanism you and others propose involves forced vibration in which some source of periodic excitation acts close enough to the resonant frequency of the tonearm/cartridge to excite resonant response. This is a plausible explanation, although it doesn't explain the noticeable discontinuity in the woofer oscillations, roughly (exactly?) once per revolution, in the video. In other words, I see two distinct periods in the video. The shorter period corresponds to the woofer oscillations, the longer period corresponds to the very regular disruption of the woofer oscillations at about 0.5 Hz.

The mechanism I'm proposing doesn't involve resonance. The warp acts like a mild ski jump that imparts a vertical acceleration to the cartridge/tonearm once per revolution --- enough to flex the cantilever but not enough for the stylus to lose contact. If the tracking force is too light, the cartridge will "bounce" repeatedly in the groove with the cantilever acting as a spring. The bounces generate several cycles of woofer oscillations until they are disrupted by the next pass over the warp and the process repeats.

I'll confess to having had exactly this problem early on with my current turntable. The cartridge and tonearm were carefully matched, I used a microscope to align the cartridge, tracking force was carefully set, and the table was well isolated and featured very low rumble. Nonetheless, the sound wasn't all that good. Then, when playing a particular LP, I noticed my subwoofer undergoing oscillations very similar to those in the OP's video. I at first assumed some form of resonance was causing the problem, but after several days, I couldn't find a cause. Then I noticed a relation between a modest warp in the record and a repeating pattern in the oscillations, very similar to the OP's video. But then why was my expensive tonearm and cartridge tracking so poorly?

The answer had to do with a shortcut I developed in operating the cueing lever that worked fine on my old table but didn't fully release the cueing support on my new table. That last bit of support reduced the effective tracking force. All it took to fix the problem was to fully depress the cueing lever. Subwoofer oscillations gone and sound quality vastly improved.

Sorry for the long post. Can anyone else see the periodic disturbances of the oscillations in the video?


I would check external things like what the table is sitting on and how far it is away from the speakers and don’t forget the floor. Tonearms just don’t  play the record. They can pickup the room environment. The floor can be a big culprit sending the bass waves straight through the tonearm causing the woofers to move.  
Have you checked to see how low your woofer is supposed to go before your excursion is too much?
The resonance mechanism you and others propose involves forced vibration in which some source of periodic excitation acts close enough to the resonant frequency of the tonearm/cartridge to excite resonant response. This is a plausible explanation, although it doesn't explain the noticeable discontinuity in the woofer oscillations, roughly (exactly?) once per revolution, in the video. In other words, I see two distinct periods in the video. The shorter period corresponds to the woofer oscillations, the longer period corresponds to the very regular disruption of the woofer oscillations at about 0.5 Hz.

The mechanism I'm proposing doesn't involve resonance. The warp acts like a mild ski jump that imparts a vertical acceleration to the cartridge/tonearm once per revolution --- enough to flex the cantilever but not enough for the stylus to lose contact.

If the cartridge has too high a compliance (too low a mechanical resonance) then it will behave as you describe. If the cantilever is stiffer (less compliance) the mechanical resonant frequency will be higher and thus the amplitude of the warp energy will be reduced. Or- if the mass (not the tracking pressure) near the stylus is reduced (by changing out the hardware and getting rid of the stylus guard if there is one) the effect is the same.


Ish_mail, I shall assume you have an SME. Great table. Great clamp.
I am not sure what it would take to bottom out a Clearaudio bearing but they do make a peripheral clamp for their tables so I would assume that it works OK. I do not think I can tell much difference between reflex clamping and vacuum (I have both). Certainly, the vacuum method subjects the record to less stress but I have never seen a record cracked by reflex clamping. The SOTA vacuum system is brilliant but admittedly more complicated than a reflex clamp. The Michell reflex clamp will work with just about any turntable playing 130 gm or less records But when it comes to 150 grams and up you have to push down so hard on the bearing to flex the record into the platter you might eventually damage the bearing. The threaded version you have is brilliant, just hold the platter and tighten it down. 

Cleeds, what your equipment is speced at has nothing to do with your system's bass performance. Judging by your opinion you do not have any bass. Impulse test your system. I'll bet there is nothing below 40 Hz. 
mijostyn

Cleeds, what your equipment is speced at has nothing to do with your system’s bass performance.
I’d agree, but only to a point. The specs merely indicate a component’s potential, according to the manufacturer, and are certainly no guarantee of actual performance. That’s why component matching and system setup are so critical.
Judging by your opinion you do not have any bass. Impulse test your system. I’ll bet there is nothing below 40 Hz.
I understand why you say that, because you’ve previously stated that, "anyone who listens to vinyl and has a subwoofer system needs a subsonic filter." Apparently your system has some rumble problems that cannot otherwise be ameliorated. But my system doesn’t have that issue, and I can get more than a full octave below 40 hZ from LP. We are talking down into LF that really can’t be heard, but only felt.

It’s not easy to get good, clean, flat LF performance from LP, but that doesn’t mean that it can’t be done.

mijostyn
2,002 posts
03-06-2020 6:25am
Cleeds, since when is a resonance point a "brick wall" situation. The resonance peaks then rolls off. If your woofers do not move at all visibly and you are playing vinyl either your woofers do not go down very low or your cartridge is too stiff for your tonearm and your bass is rolling off prematurely. I suppose you could also be listening at the volume of a mouse squeak. I would never use an analog filter. It would damage the bass too much but digital is a whole other world. I could survive without it but volumes with certain records would have to be limited and It might rob enough power to affect the room control function. There are no downsides to a digital filter up to 80 dB/oct. With a 3 dB down point at 18 Hz the effect is totally inaudible.
The problem Cleeds is that the source is vinyl, a medium that is imperfect at best. So, treating it at it's source means not playing records.

I'm the opposite opinion.   The digital filter would destroy my analog experience.   It would mean the introduction of analog conversions to digital and back.   If I need a filter, I much prefer a gentle analog filter to this level of processing.