Doug,I think Herb Papier's sucessor simply does not want to mess with a good thing,and is not the original designer,anyway.Let's face it,the arm as is,as you know,is a fabulous piece of ergonomic engineering.It also,IMO,looks incredible, on some tables(imagine it on a BRINKMAN).Sadly,and I mean this,in my case,my dealer screwed up,BIG TIME,when recommending the arm,for my SOTA COSMOS,which did not have enough room in the arm well,to support proper adjustments for the arm.Herb Papier was a PRINCE,and was so distraught,that he made(machined) a special adaptor for my arm,to fit between cartridge and arm.Unfortunately this did not stand the test of time,and I was forced to move on,but was TRULY not happy about it!!!
I have always loved the Triplaner,and really believe that had Herb been around longer,I could have solved my problem.Herb was the kind of guy that would actually call me,at my business,at times,to recommend some new mod to the arm,and offer to do it at his cost,because he was SO PASSIONATE about keeping some customers at the cutting edge.I REALLY loved the guy!I no longer do business with the dealer,though,he'd rather support(ha)digital,and video!
On a final note(well if you know me,that's never the case)the hobbyists,like yourself,who hold onto quality products long enough to solve their specific needs,are,to me,able to get the best sound from their set-ups.I know more than a few heavily bucked hobbyists that have pricey,and laughably bad sounding systems.To my little group of friends it sems to be a case of "Latest isn't always best"syndrome.Though our MEAN equipment dollar average is considerably higher than a German auto,so who am I kidding? Let's face it,if you have the dough to keep buying the latest stuff,you are NOT going to make the mental,and physical effort(updating,and modding can be quite physical)to extract the most from your stuff.You know what I mean.You seem to have solved the finer points of this perplexing,yet fascinating hobby!!
OOOPS!!Got to go.The French Open just started on ESPN.Have to study the Federer backhand.