Sunnyjim
I have seen turntables from Project, Music Hall, and a few other brands that still incorporate a small barrel weight attached to short fishline string which is stretched across a hooking loop to set ANTI-SKATING. It seems to be an artifact from the 1960’s and 1970’s tonearm design. It is also easy to lose or break
I tend to agree with you. For me this is also a let down in new expensive arm designs that use fish line. I personally see it as a cop out of sorts.
The only thing I would want on the end of a fishing line is my lure attached to a SM Bass, Trout or Muskie. There are so many different types of fishing lines, and they all deal with forces and vibrations differently, trying to trick and outsmart the fish.
http://media.nola.com/outdoors_impact/photo/fishing-lines-c5e62b4f20a3fc1f.jpg
Some are designed to stretch more; some not so much. Fishing line does lose its properties over time. So what about these 20-30 year old tonearm that are using it ?
Give a Man a Fish, and You Feed Him for a Day. Teach a Man To Fish, and You Feed Him for a Lifetime
:^)
Sunnyjim
My question is how accurate is that "device" compared to magnetic anti-skating employed by many turntable manufacturersIMO the most accurate is able to deal with changing groove modulations and gradually increase force as it nears the inner grooves. This is basic physics; based on pivot arm design. Any out there that do this ?
I think that the VPI design of using the wire itself as Anti Skate is interesting as the wire would push back more toward the inner grooves. But then you have a "shaky" uni pivot design dealing with this force.
So no designs that that I am aware of. That makes all AS settings ball park, a guess at best. And, if one wants to get anal; this means anyone setting AS at a certain point in the record - it would be applicable to just that point on that specific record only. No ?
Peter at Soundsmith imo gives some good considerations to consider.
http://www.sound-smith.com/do-i-need-anti-skating.html
Of the pivot arms I have used the slickest AS came with the FR64s.
A search of anti skating at AudioGon reveals 2146 results. Hmm....
NandricHowever Van den Hul warned against such values (above 60 microns)
exactly because they need increased anti-skate. Aka:
to much anti-skate is worst than no anti-skate at all. This is the
reason that some of use the ’’minimal amount’’ of anti-skate.
I agree
Just some thoughts over coffee.
Happy Listening whether or not you use AS.