The correlation is contra-intuitive by the counterweight;
the heavier the counterweight the lesser the (arm)mass because a heavier counterweight get nearer to the pivot.
One can of course also reduce the arm-mass with lighter headshells (ususually done by FR- tonearms) but I don't like light headshells. This imply more counterweights as
some tonearms provide ( Triplanar, Sumiko 800, etc). The aim however is to get the resonance around 10 Hz as already mentioned. My Sumiko 800 has 5 counterweights meant for carts from 6 -22 g. My Triplanar has 4 but both have fast headshells while the obvious presupposition is to get those counterweights as near as possible to the pivot. In the discussion about the Triplanar however this presupposition is not accepted as a rule. One should experiment with different positions with the weights and choose the best sounding one. As is, alas, so often the case 'it depends'. I hate this expression btw.
Regards,
the heavier the counterweight the lesser the (arm)mass because a heavier counterweight get nearer to the pivot.
One can of course also reduce the arm-mass with lighter headshells (ususually done by FR- tonearms) but I don't like light headshells. This imply more counterweights as
some tonearms provide ( Triplanar, Sumiko 800, etc). The aim however is to get the resonance around 10 Hz as already mentioned. My Sumiko 800 has 5 counterweights meant for carts from 6 -22 g. My Triplanar has 4 but both have fast headshells while the obvious presupposition is to get those counterweights as near as possible to the pivot. In the discussion about the Triplanar however this presupposition is not accepted as a rule. One should experiment with different positions with the weights and choose the best sounding one. As is, alas, so often the case 'it depends'. I hate this expression btw.
Regards,