Doug:
I don't expect you to defend Stringreen. I addressed you and him as you were both in the no- antiskate camp, and you had agreed with his point.
You said
Applying antiskate pulls the arm (and therefore the cantilever pivot) outwards thus equalising the VTF on both channels. The inward and outward forces are then equal at both the stylus and the cantilever pivot, as they are joined by the cantilever, and the plane of movement of the cantilever is therefore vertical. If there is no antiskate (intentional, or otherwise via wiring) then the forces must be unequal, and with enough VTF, while the stylus may track correctly without the distortion due to low VTF on the right channel, that channel will have appreciably more tracking force than the left. And any alteration of VTF will still vary downforce disproportionately.
Arms are designed to have a mechanism to allow some form of compensation for skating force, as the force cannot be wished away. It is what designers do. It is good basic arm design, like having variable VTF. It is for designers who don't wish to include it to try to explain their decision.
Whether is is well implemented, or compromised by wiring torque, or the user wishes to use it, is another matter.
Stringreen:
In my previous post the last sentence was wrong - it was a typo.
To the OP, Mulveling:
If all set up parameters are correct, and an arm cannot supply sufficient antiskate to eliminate right channel distortion, then there may be stiffness in the bearing (not usually the case with unipivots) or drag in the internal wiring.
John
.
I don't expect you to defend Stringreen. I addressed you and him as you were both in the no- antiskate camp, and you had agreed with his point.
You said
Skating forces put an inward bias on the stylus. The stylus wants to skate inward but is constrained by the inner groovewall.This is incorrect. It is the arm that pivots inwards because of the resultant force produced by stylus friction in the direction tangent to the groove and the restraining force in the direction of the arm pivot. The stylus, on the other hand, is actually being pushed upwards and outwards against the compliance of the suspension as the cantilever pivot moves inwards.
However, so long as steady contact is maintained with both groovewalls, no distortion will occur. If the stylus traces the grooves accurately, it will reproduce accurately (for its part).As the stylus is pushed up the 45 degree slope of the groove, the VTF on the opposite face decreases.
Applying antiskate pulls the arm (and therefore the cantilever pivot) outwards thus equalising the VTF on both channels. The inward and outward forces are then equal at both the stylus and the cantilever pivot, as they are joined by the cantilever, and the plane of movement of the cantilever is therefore vertical. If there is no antiskate (intentional, or otherwise via wiring) then the forces must be unequal, and with enough VTF, while the stylus may track correctly without the distortion due to low VTF on the right channel, that channel will have appreciably more tracking force than the left. And any alteration of VTF will still vary downforce disproportionately.
Arms are designed to have a mechanism to allow some form of compensation for skating force, as the force cannot be wished away. It is what designers do. It is good basic arm design, like having variable VTF. It is for designers who don't wish to include it to try to explain their decision.
Whether is is well implemented, or compromised by wiring torque, or the user wishes to use it, is another matter.
Stringreen:
In my previous post the last sentence was wrong - it was a typo.
To the OP, Mulveling:
If all set up parameters are correct, and an arm cannot supply sufficient antiskate to eliminate right channel distortion, then there may be stiffness in the bearing (not usually the case with unipivots) or drag in the internal wiring.
John
.