rauliruegas
Yes but the problem word in that statement is: " correctly " and till today exist no single method/mechanism to set up " correctly ".That's really not quite true. Just because something can't be executed perfectly doesn't mean that it can't be done; there's no reason to let perfection be the enemy of the good. In engineering, everything has a tolerance, and the same is true of anti-skate. There's no reason not to use anti-skate just because you aren't certain that a given setting is "perfect."