Help! Tweaking My Lovan Rack for new Big A**ed Transrotor Turntable!


Folks, some input would be mighty appreciated.

I’ve been using a hand-me-down (though very nice!) Micro Seiki dd-40 turntable for a number of years and finally got the upgrade itch (it helps the upgrade itch when your cartridge is going on 30 years old, and sounding like it!).

I went down the rabbit hole and picked up a Transrotor Fat Bob S turntable, with an Acoustic Solid 12" arm and a Benz Micro Ebony cartridge. All with only about 30 hours of use at a great price. Yay!

Though I have considered getting rid of my old Lovan Classic rack for a new custom jobby, I’m pretty much spent out and I think I’ll have to make do for now, working with the Lovan.

The Fat Bob turntable is 55 lbs of solid aluminum and built like Thor’s hammer.

I figure this will finally get me to fill my Lovan stands for a bit more rigidity - probably with rice. The stand is the old 3 legged triangular shaped bass, which means the thin MDF shelves can feel like they sit sort of precariously on top. But the stand itself feels quite solid.

I want to incorporate a wood platform base, as many do, because I really love the look of a nice wood slab.

At first I thought maybe I’d have 3 spikes drilled in to the bottom corners of the wood base to directly couple it to the rest of the Lovan frame, vs resting it on the top mdf shelf. But I’m not sure that’s really necessary. And I’d like to incorporate some isolation as well, I think. So I’m thinking of just laying it on the top shelf, with something in between.

My first thought is to place a Symposium Segue shelf between the top of the Lovan shelf and the wood base.

Other than that...I’m flummoxed as to all the other choices...roller blocks? Symposium Fat Padz? Vibrapods? Herbie’s Tendersoft footers? Voo-Doo Isopods?  What should I put between the wood platform base and my Lovan shelf?

Any comments of suggestions on the direction I’m going?

Thanks!

(BTW, I’m an resolutely NOT a DIY/Handy-man type, so I’m not trying to go to heroic efforts, wishing this to be as painless as possible).
prof
I put a record on the turntable (not playing it) and dropped the needle.  The cartridge/needle appears to sit fine on the record.  Does that tell me anything?
Is it one of the AS tonearms with the one point headshell connection? Like the WTB313? https://goo.gl/images/NUGojx

If so it could simply be that the connection point was loose and the headshell twisted. On most tonearms you couldn’t change the orientation of the cartridge that much without severe damage but with this design you may have gotten lucky. Have you tried playing an LP (with volume low?)
Ah ok when you mentioned “loose and wiggly” I thought you were referencing the cantilever, which would be a no-recovery scenario. You might actually be ok here!
folkfreak,

Yes it's exactly that AS tonearm (12").  It was sort of "unscrewed" slightly when I found the cartridge pointed a bit off center. Slightly tightening that top screw holding the cartridge on seemed to tighten up the cartridge to the arm ok.  I hope you are right and I got lucky with this design.

mulveling, yes it was the cartridge itself that was askew, not the cantilever at all.
First, thanks for the previous replies.

Ok, so my buddy came over today to re-set the cartridge and check it out.

It seems like the cartridge is ok, thank goodness.

Though after re-aligning it the sound changed. Before the cartridge was knocked askew I had been trying to decide if I like the impedance set at 100 or 250 Ohm (my phono stage makes the switch easy from the front panel). 100 Ohm sounded darker, wetter, richer and more relaxed, 250 Ohm sounded brighter, punchier, a bit more accurate and "real" in some ways.

But after the re-set of the cartridge today, that changed. Now the 100 Ohm setting sounds like the 250 Ohm did, and I have to knock it down to 33 Ohms to get it to sound like it did before at 100 Ohms.

Turntables. So puzzling.