Hi,
excellent maths no doubt.
Let's look at some practical part of it all then.
1) Is the **effective** mass of an arm increased if the counter weight it moved further away from the pivot bearing?
(I think so, because the mass / moment is increased)
2) If a spring is used for VTF, the CW is further back from the fulcrum as the spring provides the down force and the CW only the arm balance.
What is the effect, if assumption of 1) is correct?
3) If static down force is used, the CW is closer to the pivot/fulcrum, the mass moment should therefore be reduced. What is the effect as compared to 2)?
Inertia has of course ONLY an effect if acceleration is present, and with any tonearm particularly riding a 'taco warp'.
Incidentally, I find the type of warp lifting a smaller area from the start-wax (~ 1" into the record) more common and more radical in vertical acceleration, plus the one that actually pushed in the (still soft?) start-wax for ~ 1/8" causing VERY nasty lateral acceleration.
This leads me to think that lower accelerated mass (effetive mass?), plus higher compliance be the better solution to this kind of problem.
But I still can not make the connection to the 'dynamic VTF' being of any advantage, since (given 1)'s assumption is right) the accelerated mass of the same arm with only using static VTF be somewhat lower.
Note: SME quotes, the V arm's effective mass 10 - 11 gr. (depending where the CW is positioned...)
Axel