Stringreen,
You're rather insulting to those of us with a different point of view. Not only that, you don't know what you're talking about. If you can't hear channel imbalance w/o anti-skate, then you have a linear arm or a hearing problem.
Regards,
Anti skate. I think something's wrong
To all the anti anti-skaters! This guy should know more about anti-skating than you do! http://www.sound-smith.com/do-i-need-anti-skating.html |
now, now boys......what I say is that a/s can never be adjusted properly,.. and does harm to the end result than to use it. It produces a force which prevents the stylus from being free to respond to the undulations of the record, and thus closes in the sound. The absence of a/s opens the sound and I certainly can hear it on my system. I wrote what I did to encourage people to listen with and without to determine what’s best for you. Soundsmith proposes using it because he fixes cartridges and it seems right for him. Harry builds turntables and doesn’t use a/s on his tables, but includes the mechanism because of market wishes. I don’t use Harry’s twist method which is another means of using anti-skate. I don’t care if anyone uses it or not...only recommend listening and deciding for yourself. That’s what these pages are for. I can tell you that with my system if I use my Ortofon, Benz, or Dyna cartridges, they all sound better with no a/s....and not only is the sound better, but I never have tracking issues with any of the cartridges...no sibilant S's, no unexpected fuzzy sound in the louder sections... nothing. |
...what I say is that a/s can never be adjusted properly...And therefore any anti-skating setting, including zero, is a compromise. Which says nothing as to whether zero may be a better compromise or a worse compromise than any other. As I mentioned earlier, I have no experience with low compliance cartridges. But I can say that with cartridges having compliances in the higher parts of the spectrum setting anti-skating to zero would result in cantilever deflection toward the outer edge of the record that upon close visual examination is so severe that it would seem to me to be absurd to even try such a setting. Yogiboy, thanks for the link. Very informative article, from an unimpeachable source as you implied. I note, btw, that in Mr. Ledermann's reference in the article to looking at cantilever deflection he limits its usefulness to cartridges having medium to high compliance. Although he is addressing its usefulness as a check for gross error, rather than with respect to the adjustment procedure I described above. Regards, -- Al |
Dear lewm: Agree, AZ per se ( normal conditions. ) can't change the SPL on one channel, perhaps on " extreme conditions of a very bad AZ set up. Same with AS. Now, what I was thinking is that in a wrong set up exist an accumulation of " errors " on diferent parameters that even if the SPL is not impaired we can perceive the sound as unbalanced one. I think that blueranger can take the " short/path/road " to fix the problem: - listen in the same analog rig a diferent cartridge looking if exist the same unbalanced quality sound. Here he can discern if the problem is in the Ortofon Cadenza Bronze or not - Listen to his CD player looking for that channels unbalanced sound. If persist then is not a cartridge problem or phono stage problem but: line stage/amplifiers or speakers or even some kind of problem in the tonearm. From here, he has to follow tests on each of those single system chain links. Now, we can follow give any kind of advise to blueranger but it's not easy for any one of us to say with precission where is the real trouble. Regards and enjoy the music, R. |