Thom,
I also experimented with thicker mylar belts (probably described it somewhere above). On my Teres, a .003" belt slipped badly. As thinner mylar belts did not do this, I attributed the slipping to the thick belt being too rigid to maintain contact as it attempted to make the tight turn around the capstan.
For torque transfer, the optimal setup is probably subject to the so-called Capstan equation. Note that this equation assumes that the belt is inelastic and not overly rigid. Both of these considerations have been been (and are still being) discussed and developed by you and other participants on this thread.
Of course this does not address noise transfer. As you noted, the requirements of maximizing torque transfer while minimizing noise transfer are largely contradictory. The optimal solution will always vary with the characteristics of the motor and turntable.
BTW, neither the Galibier motor nor any other TT motor uses a "pulley". By design, pulleys minimize torque transfer (ideally to zero). Attaching a pulley to a TT motor would result in a platter rotational speed fairly close to zero.
Turntables use "powered capstans".
Doug
I also experimented with thicker mylar belts (probably described it somewhere above). On my Teres, a .003" belt slipped badly. As thinner mylar belts did not do this, I attributed the slipping to the thick belt being too rigid to maintain contact as it attempted to make the tight turn around the capstan.
For torque transfer, the optimal setup is probably subject to the so-called Capstan equation. Note that this equation assumes that the belt is inelastic and not overly rigid. Both of these considerations have been been (and are still being) discussed and developed by you and other participants on this thread.
Of course this does not address noise transfer. As you noted, the requirements of maximizing torque transfer while minimizing noise transfer are largely contradictory. The optimal solution will always vary with the characteristics of the motor and turntable.
BTW, neither the Galibier motor nor any other TT motor uses a "pulley". By design, pulleys minimize torque transfer (ideally to zero). Attaching a pulley to a TT motor would result in a platter rotational speed fairly close to zero.
Turntables use "powered capstans".
Doug