Dear
@mikelavigne and frieds: Mike,with all respect servos per sé are not a devil it does not matters where you use it. For your coments in this thread seems to me that that word over distress you and with out any single reason/facts true3 facts or measured ones. You have a " feeling " about when you said:
"" i view both the Saskia and CS Port as having the most steady tonal solidity of any turntable i have heard. the NVS and EMT are also very fine at that ’steady’ and ’solid’ type sound. only that the Saskia and CS Port are degrees more grainless and liquid, as well and greater tonal shading and density ""
that’s what you like it and nothing wrong against that but the Saskia and CS Port TTs are both way different whole designs against the @jtinn great NVS DD design, even the CS Port comes with its dedicated LT tonearm.
Mike there is no way that those 3 different TT designs can sounds almost the same. Again that " degrees more gainless and liquid " is what you prefer.
Now, let me explain something in that overall rectification speed controllers subject including the servo " devil ":
exis different kind of servo designs using different " tools "/technologies to do it: cristal quartz look ( that normally we can disengage. ) is one of them and one of the technique used in the vintage DD TT and still today works really fine, there are servos that sense the speed over " thousands " times at each TT rpm and are " there " only when is need it a speed rectification even exist bi-directional servos as in JVC, Yamaha or Denon TTs.
Other than TTs subwoofers use servos and as the now defunct Velodyne they did it through an patented accelerometer that sense the wooffer movements over 80K times each second to mantain the THD lower than 0.5% at 20hz at 120db on SPL. Your speakers subs has to have some kind of controller to its low bass range stays with low distortion levels, you can’t avoid it.
This is what the motor designer of the Saskia posted:
https://db.audioasylum.com/mhtml/m.html?forum=vinyl&n=1081734&highlight=saskia&r=&se...This was posted by Sakia manufacturer:
https://db.audioasylum.com/mhtml/m.html?forum=vinyl&n=1117513&highlight=saskia&r=&se...Mike, you said:
"" the Saskia does have an optical reader installed ...."
I can think that that optical reader is to make speed rectification/corrections when is need it. Same function as any servo speed controller.
If you can detect the servo operation then you must detect this kind of rectification no matters what and if you don’t did it then both the servo and the optical controllers has no real/true intrusion in what any one ( including you. ) can listen or that can say exist an " intrusion " because in both cases exist a " change to the TT speed "/a correction to.
In 2014
@richardkrebs posted about that optical controller type:
""" Dougdeacon said...
"No strobe (Timeline or otherwise) operates in short enough increments of time to detect micro-/pico-/nano-second variations. Knowing that a TT is speed stable across a time span of minutes tells us nothing about how stable or unstable it may be across a few thousandths or millionths of a second. Such short-period variations are just as audible and musically important, arguably more so."
Brilliant. This is so true.
Tonywinsc also touched on the same point.
IMO it is the reduction of these tiny speed changes that is one key to a TTs performance. Do we have a way to objectively measure this? Maybe, with some of the new optical speed sensors capable of measuring greater than 1x10^6 counts per rev, but I sure know that we can hear it. """
In the other side and about the CS Port BD TT and only looking at its specs I can say that are really poor against today/vintage top standards in that regards. These are those specs and certainly you must listen to it:
"" Crystal follower non-feedback motor drive
XFD method.
Rotation transmission method Yarn drive (four-wire aramid fiber).
Drive motor DC coreless low-noise motor
Rotation speed33 1/3 ・ 45rpm (with switch selection and rotation fine adjustment)
Rotational speed accuracy±0.3%
Wow and flutter:
Wow 0.2%
Flutter 0.04% or less """
I already posted that I can’t detect any disturbances in what I listened or listen through Denon and Technics top models due to its servo speed controllers.
I can’t detect either any " intrusion " by speed motor drive corrections in my BD Acoustic Signature unit where I use as a belt either: aramid fiber thread or silk thread. Btw, I neither detect it speed controller intrusion with my Micro Seiki TT.
I have to say that I never had in my system an ID TT.
I insist in this " devil " TT subject because as I posted before the servo controllers are the ones used in all recording cutting lathe DD motors and no one can detect till today any trouble because of that in any of his LPs.
For me all those means exist no true problems about and certainly no objective facts.
I know that for all audiophiles and everywhere, including you, could be really a learning " sessions " that both: @mosin and @jtinn be so kindness to chime about because the issue is way critical.
Gentlemans both of you thank’s in advance and appreciated.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.