Doug,
It has been changed since the first version, and while it can't catch sudden issues like stylus effect, it can show things like drift, stylus influence on the record, etc., in a more general sort of way that is way more accurate than the typical strobe disc affair at greater than two parts per million. I was actually surprised at its response on certain turntables that I tried with it.
What I would like to see is a strobe disc so large that it almost hits the tonearm base. An extension like that would also be more accurate than the typical disc.
Win
It has been changed since the first version, and while it can't catch sudden issues like stylus effect, it can show things like drift, stylus influence on the record, etc., in a more general sort of way that is way more accurate than the typical strobe disc affair at greater than two parts per million. I was actually surprised at its response on certain turntables that I tried with it.
What I would like to see is a strobe disc so large that it almost hits the tonearm base. An extension like that would also be more accurate than the typical disc.
Win