Dear Bill: Now that I read both of your posts I think we are talking almost the same.
All those different set of equations were made to optimize/put at minimum the tracking error somewhere but to bring at minimum the tracking error means that we have to choose in what part of the LP recorded surface grooves we want to do it because we can't do it all over the recording LP surface.
So always is a trade-off choice.
The interesting for me in this whole subject is that in almost any pivot tonearm we can change those equations parameters and with the same cartridge see what happen and what works better in the audio system.
Now, IMHO for we can heard/hear differences in quality performance due to this geometry changes it is a must that in each time we test it the cartridge/tonearm set up were made almost perfect.
The analog medium is so imperfect that in this subject we have to be " perfect " to achieve a valued information.
Regards and enjoy the music,
Raul.
All those different set of equations were made to optimize/put at minimum the tracking error somewhere but to bring at minimum the tracking error means that we have to choose in what part of the LP recorded surface grooves we want to do it because we can't do it all over the recording LP surface.
So always is a trade-off choice.
The interesting for me in this whole subject is that in almost any pivot tonearm we can change those equations parameters and with the same cartridge see what happen and what works better in the audio system.
Now, IMHO for we can heard/hear differences in quality performance due to this geometry changes it is a must that in each time we test it the cartridge/tonearm set up were made almost perfect.
The analog medium is so imperfect that in this subject we have to be " perfect " to achieve a valued information.
Regards and enjoy the music,
Raul.