Stylus drag real or myth?
Some time ago I did an experiment to determine just what effect stylus drag would have on an LP. I used a DL103 set to 2.5 gram tracking weight and used a regular 120 gram LP on a cheap mat felt mat (I believe off one of my old Regas). I made a small notch in the edge of the record and aligned it to a piece of tape on the platter. Looking up the edge of the tape (akin to looking down the sights of rifle) I could line up the notch in the LP very precisely.
The one side of the record was played (approx 20 min). The record was unclamped.
Now if the average groove speed is about 14.1 inch per second (20 inch per second on the outer grooves, 8.3 on the inner most groove), that means I am looking at about 1410 feet (16920 inches) of groove length.
After playing, the record shifted at the very most, not more than 1/64 of an inch. That means that over a period of 20 minutes and distance of 16920 inches, stylus drag amounted to only 1/64 of an inch of record slippage; or stated differently 9.235e-5 % slippage.
I did not bother to measure/calculate and compare the amount of drag needed to slide the unclamped LP on the felt mat vs. the drag need to overcome the rotational inertia of a 12 pound platter (never mind the 30 plus lbs Teres platters). I simply cannot buy into the idea that the force of the rotational mass of a platter would be less than the force required to make a 120gram LP slip.
I have not heard a Teres as yet, but I did own an idler wheel (TD124). The idler wheel had no more speed stability than any of my AC motored belt drive turntables.
Regards
Paul
Some time ago I did an experiment to determine just what effect stylus drag would have on an LP. I used a DL103 set to 2.5 gram tracking weight and used a regular 120 gram LP on a cheap mat felt mat (I believe off one of my old Regas). I made a small notch in the edge of the record and aligned it to a piece of tape on the platter. Looking up the edge of the tape (akin to looking down the sights of rifle) I could line up the notch in the LP very precisely.
The one side of the record was played (approx 20 min). The record was unclamped.
Now if the average groove speed is about 14.1 inch per second (20 inch per second on the outer grooves, 8.3 on the inner most groove), that means I am looking at about 1410 feet (16920 inches) of groove length.
After playing, the record shifted at the very most, not more than 1/64 of an inch. That means that over a period of 20 minutes and distance of 16920 inches, stylus drag amounted to only 1/64 of an inch of record slippage; or stated differently 9.235e-5 % slippage.
I did not bother to measure/calculate and compare the amount of drag needed to slide the unclamped LP on the felt mat vs. the drag need to overcome the rotational inertia of a 12 pound platter (never mind the 30 plus lbs Teres platters). I simply cannot buy into the idea that the force of the rotational mass of a platter would be less than the force required to make a 120gram LP slip.
I have not heard a Teres as yet, but I did own an idler wheel (TD124). The idler wheel had no more speed stability than any of my AC motored belt drive turntables.
Regards
Paul