Richardkrebs:
Yet again I have to address your gross assumptions and misunderstanding of the principles of the ET.
If you bothered to read the manual you would see that the double spring is for low compliance cartridges and should be used with the minimum counterweight pushed further out on the I beam to position the resonance of the I beam and counterweight BELOW the horizontal resonance of the arm.
More guesswork?
You persist in arguing your unfounded case for fixing the counterweight.
Arrant nonsense.
To remind readers I repeat:
The decoupled methodology employed by Bruce Thigpen is designed to minimize horizontal inertia and ensure the resonance of the I beam and counterweight remains below the horizontal resonance of the arm. The rigid coupling of the I beam and counterweight that you advocate is contrary to these stated design goals.
Once again, we go round the block for the umpteenth time.
Bruce Thigpen has calculated, tested and measured precisely the resonances of the decoupled I beam and counterweight with a wide variety of cartridges from low to medium to high compliance to determine the level of decoupling required to optimize the cartridges performance.
How many times before you get that decoupling is an integral part of the ET2 design and how the arm is engineered to optimize performance. You are clearly out of your depth. You persist in misapplying physics and just don’t seem to be able to comprehend the design. Do you run your car on 3 wheels?
You have resorted to implying that readers who have tried removing the decoupling and found it to be detrimental are either fixing up defects in their system or have biases. That is an arrogant assumption, and reflects poorly of your estimation of the contributors to this thread.
Yet again I have to address your gross assumptions and misunderstanding of the principles of the ET.
RichardkrebsThis is absolute rubbish. You are implying that the decoupling and non-decoupling are both valid, when they are not. With the ET2, the outcomes are entirely different and Bruce Thigpen has tested and measured these. The decoupled methodology employed by Bruce Thigpen is designed to minimize horizontal inertia and ensure the resonance of the I beam and counterweight remains below the horizontal resonance of the arm. The rigid coupling of the I beam and counterweight that you advocate is contrary to these stated design goals. Your comment about voicing the system to biases is as presumptuous as it is incorrect. An experienced listener can hear changes in transient speed and accuracy of timbre and timing irrespective of the system. That is how a system should be tuned.
Frogman and Dover say that they prefer a loose connenction and one leaf spring. Chris says that triple springs produce a sound that is too lean.
Rockport, Walker, Kuzma and I say that there should be no spring at all.
I believe ALL of the above statements as I think that they are actually saying the same thing along a continuum.
It all depends upon the voicing of your system and our biases, and we all have biases.
RichardkrebsYour statement contradicts research and testing by Bruce Thigpen, and I quote the following email from Bruce Thigpen published above:
Double or triple springs push the resonant frequency above the core resonance which is also good.
Bruce ThigpenRichard, clearly you have not done any testing to support your guesswork, otherwise you would have found that 98% of the time you are wrong.
Chris,
You always want the horizontal natural frequency of the counterweight to be less than the cartridge/arm resonance, this is the case 98% of the time.
The natural frequency of the I-beam/leaf spring depends on the thickness of the spring, the amount of weight, and where the weight is on the beam. The natural frequency goes down as the weight moves further out on the beam which is where we want it to be.
brucet
If you bothered to read the manual you would see that the double spring is for low compliance cartridges and should be used with the minimum counterweight pushed further out on the I beam to position the resonance of the I beam and counterweight BELOW the horizontal resonance of the arm.
RichardkrebsAgain, if you bothered to read the manual and Bruce Thigpen’s website, the decoupled counterweight is designed precisely to achieve this. Furthermore on Bruce’s website he has provided extensive test results proving this.
I have said that I don't think that it is a good idea to have a mass attached to two dissimilar springs who's resonances are in the same neighbourhood.
RichardkrebsI have already explained to you in great length that the mathematical model you refer to, "harmonic oscillators", which you pulled out of wikipedia, does not apply. Let me help you. Read my post of 03-14-13, the first sentence begins
The transmissibility graph I posted shows the potential nasty consequences of this.
Dover
Richardkrebs
OK now I understand where you are going wrong in your thinking.
RichardkrebsWhere did you pluck this number from? Why 6 times? Please don't use an incorrect mathematical model again when you attempt to explain.
At least a 6 x seperation of the two resonant frequencies would a target.
RichardkrebsBruce has completed extensive testing and provided clear guidelines on the use of the light spring. He has calculated the resonances and provided extensive guidance. What testing have you done, or is this purely speculative guesswork on your part yet again.
We also have to be carefull that we do not go to low with lite springs since we get close to eccentricity frequencies again with possible nasty consequences.
RichardkrebsHave you tested this? What resonant frequency did you measure?
My early fixed counterweight designs resonated somewhere in the midrange.
Increasing its rigidity more, pushed the resonance above the frequency of audibility.
More guesswork?
Richardkrebs
This is desirable and is the final logical progression to the tests that have been listed in this thread.
You persist in arguing your unfounded case for fixing the counterweight.
Arrant nonsense.
To remind readers I repeat:
The decoupled methodology employed by Bruce Thigpen is designed to minimize horizontal inertia and ensure the resonance of the I beam and counterweight remains below the horizontal resonance of the arm. The rigid coupling of the I beam and counterweight that you advocate is contrary to these stated design goals.
Once again, we go round the block for the umpteenth time.
Bruce Thigpen has calculated, tested and measured precisely the resonances of the decoupled I beam and counterweight with a wide variety of cartridges from low to medium to high compliance to determine the level of decoupling required to optimize the cartridges performance.
How many times before you get that decoupling is an integral part of the ET2 design and how the arm is engineered to optimize performance. You are clearly out of your depth. You persist in misapplying physics and just don’t seem to be able to comprehend the design. Do you run your car on 3 wheels?
You have resorted to implying that readers who have tried removing the decoupling and found it to be detrimental are either fixing up defects in their system or have biases. That is an arrogant assumption, and reflects poorly of your estimation of the contributors to this thread.