Dear Dan_Ed, I can't offer the eloquence displayed in your opening sentence of the last post, however I will once and for last try to clarify my point:
Compromises where they are inevitable.
As for the questions asked:
- no, string tension was not that critical - it just prolonged the time frame to full speed.
- yes, it was no problem to find repeatably the right tension. I had a calibrated spring gauge and a laser to determine it.
- DC and / or AC - as I wished. The controller was the control board from the Studer fortified with a custom build amplifier to create the signal.
There were compromises in my early design too. Some I did only detect years later.
None that were detected by others. None that others detected in their designs ever.
Thats why I am doing it again this summer and autumn.
But even if I go on and on with the details it will not cure the problem.
Me insiting on the "no need" for compromise in turntable design seems to be a kind of sacrilege to some.
The human experience shows us that it took almost 8 Millenias of civilisation till democracy took over on a larger scale.
Does this proof anything??
One century of turntable design. Maybe. But only the last 30 years did came up any turntables trying to be "state of the art". So its pretty young an evolution. Shall we give up now? Seems as if quite some people would prefer things to stay the way they are.....
Sorry, - somehow I am missing the point........
I would much more prefer to return to technical facts and hypothesis then debatting about my unability to realize that inevitable need for compromise.
There must be something extremely tempting and attractive about finding early compromises and life in peace with them ever after.
I am sure I am just too simple minded to see and realize that attractivity.
Poor me.
Compromises where they are inevitable.
As for the questions asked:
- no, string tension was not that critical - it just prolonged the time frame to full speed.
- yes, it was no problem to find repeatably the right tension. I had a calibrated spring gauge and a laser to determine it.
- DC and / or AC - as I wished. The controller was the control board from the Studer fortified with a custom build amplifier to create the signal.
There were compromises in my early design too. Some I did only detect years later.
None that were detected by others. None that others detected in their designs ever.
Thats why I am doing it again this summer and autumn.
But even if I go on and on with the details it will not cure the problem.
Me insiting on the "no need" for compromise in turntable design seems to be a kind of sacrilege to some.
The human experience shows us that it took almost 8 Millenias of civilisation till democracy took over on a larger scale.
Does this proof anything??
One century of turntable design. Maybe. But only the last 30 years did came up any turntables trying to be "state of the art". So its pretty young an evolution. Shall we give up now? Seems as if quite some people would prefer things to stay the way they are.....
Sorry, - somehow I am missing the point........
I would much more prefer to return to technical facts and hypothesis then debatting about my unability to realize that inevitable need for compromise.
There must be something extremely tempting and attractive about finding early compromises and life in peace with them ever after.
I am sure I am just too simple minded to see and realize that attractivity.
Poor me.