I have no gripe; as noted, I switched. I was only trying for a bit of levity. If you read what others have posted here and elsewhere about fussing with belts of various kinds, I hardly think you can deny that the belt per se is bothersome if one is a perfectionist. I do apologize, because my comment was OT.
27 responses Add your response
Mylar tape (even without the special treatment I described on that thread) performs far better than rubbery belts, silk thread, dental floss, recording tape, vcr tape, spiderweb fibers or anything else we've tried. BUT, the motor's capstan and the platter must be suitably sized and shaped. The tape we use is 1/2" wide. Most TT motor capstans won't accommodate that. The platter should have flat vertical sides, no grooves or other irregularities. Additionally, the motor will need very precise levelling (paper shims work). This wide, dimensionally stable mylar tape is completely inelastic so it provides a direct mechanical linkage with no stretch and very little slippage - which is the whole point. However, this leaves very little room for deviations. If the sides of the motor capstan aren't precisely parallel with the sides of the platter, the tape will crawl right off the capstan in just a few revolutions. That usually destroys the tape (which takes an hour or more to make). Superb motor/platter coupling, but not for the faint of heart or for those who aren't adept at twiddling! ;) |
Just for kicks I went out and got some elastic thread, as my prevoius attempts to use silk and nylon thread resulted in lots of slipping. Why do I even want to try this? Purely for said kicks. I'm just plain curious to see if I can actually hear any difference between that and my VPI belt; will something with less friction and surface area sound any different. So, does anyone know of an elastic thread material that is the same tiny diameter as, say, silk or nylon thread ? (And don't say, "Yeah, man, it's called a belt.") The 'table is a homebrew, with a satin-finished 70mm platter; the motor is from an older TNT. Thanks, Mark |
You can't do it without a speed controller. The different diameter of the string vs belt will result in a major speed difference. Here's a link to an on-line vendor for inexpensive silk thread in any color you may want. I recommend size or 3. Griffin Silk Bead Cord. Link below for online supply: http://www.artbeads.com/stringing-materials-griffin-silk-bead-cord.html |
Do both spans. The short length between the motor and the flywheel likes more tension than the platter span. Heavy cotton or poly thread requires a bloodknot; thicker silk requires a loop knot with the knot positioned to travel on the outside of the span. It takes a bit of practice to arrive at the correct tensions, but once there you won't go back. |
Thanks to both. Advice is very helpful. I use non-flexible nylon string with speed contoller. I find the speed is 6% faster with the nylon string. For the sound, I find it cleaner with less coloration (or less rubber belt sound), tone is more natural, image is 3-dimensional, bass is better defined and improve tonal balance a lot. Exactly what Sojs commented. The background sounds quieter and darker, probably due to more stable speed and no motor vibration is being transferred through the belt to the platter. But I get small motor noise comes out from the motor spindle. I don't know why. Is the tension too tight? Can this be resolved? Really apprieciate is Ptmconsulting or Sojs can give advise. San |
I agree with Ptmconsulting completely. I am using 0.004" nylon string with SDS controller. It sounds more detailed and clearler. Bass seems better defined. Sounds like high frequencies are better defined. It seems to have less bass, but bass is better defined. If your system is bright in the beginning, you may not like it. I am going back and forth with this and still trying to find which way is better in my system. |
If you're even considering this then you need to have a speed controller as well. The different diameter of the thread vs the rubber belt will result in a speed difference on the platter. Basically you need a non-stretch string, nylon or silk seem to work best. You will probably need to give the platter a starting push with the string. The sound difference / improvement is very noticeable. Better PRAT and detail retrieval with the string. Notes seem clearer and unsmeared. If you don't have a speed controller you could try putting something heavy and smooth up against the rubber belt where it comes off the motor spindle before it gets to the platter. You just need to touch it enough to damp those nasty vibrations travelling along it. |