Everything matters. With turntables its primarily speed stability and vibration control. With the tone arm its vibration control and preserving the delicate cartridge output signal. Either way because of the way the cartridge works any vibration at all is indistinguishable from the groove signal vibration and becomes a part of the signal. The perfect arm will be stiff, in order to preserve dynamics, and highly damped, in order to minimize harmonic vibrations smearing the signal.
The difference between arms is easy to hear. Improved dynamics and detail, greater instrumental character, on and on. But its due to a combination of things. Its bearing design, mount and arm tube materials, every single aspect of design and construction and materials really. An arm like my Origin Live Conqueror has a direct signal path. The phono leads are continuous without connections from the cartridge pins to the phono stage. Some other arms will have the leads terminate in RCA, you need an interconnect, which adds connections. And expense.
Some arms have VTA easily adjustable, some even on-the-fly (while playing). Precise VTA adjustment is crucial. Some arms make it a pain in the butt. Some make it all but impossible. Others make it a breeze.
Some arms just plain look nice. Some are a pleasure to use. These things matter. Don’t pretend they don’t! It hardly ever makes any sense to buy anything based on tech specs but you buy an arm that way I can just about guarantee you will regret it. I did. Bye-bye Graham. Love my Conqueror.
You will read tons of comments on this. You will learn next to nothing. Even from me. What you will learn from though, a lot, is if you fork over $40 and order a sheet of fo.Q tape off eBay. Then stick that stuff on your current turntable and arm. Don’t worry, it peels right off if you don’t want it. With this tape you will hear what I’m talking about. Basically for $40 you will begin to appreciate what is going on. And it will be money well spent because it will make what you already have sound so much better.
There’s other tweaks like this. Do them all now, learn, and it will help you appreciate and understand why its worth upgrading. Then when you do and move all this stuff over to the new rig, wow you will appreciate it all over again.
The difference between arms is easy to hear. Improved dynamics and detail, greater instrumental character, on and on. But its due to a combination of things. Its bearing design, mount and arm tube materials, every single aspect of design and construction and materials really. An arm like my Origin Live Conqueror has a direct signal path. The phono leads are continuous without connections from the cartridge pins to the phono stage. Some other arms will have the leads terminate in RCA, you need an interconnect, which adds connections. And expense.
Some arms have VTA easily adjustable, some even on-the-fly (while playing). Precise VTA adjustment is crucial. Some arms make it a pain in the butt. Some make it all but impossible. Others make it a breeze.
Some arms just plain look nice. Some are a pleasure to use. These things matter. Don’t pretend they don’t! It hardly ever makes any sense to buy anything based on tech specs but you buy an arm that way I can just about guarantee you will regret it. I did. Bye-bye Graham. Love my Conqueror.
You will read tons of comments on this. You will learn next to nothing. Even from me. What you will learn from though, a lot, is if you fork over $40 and order a sheet of fo.Q tape off eBay. Then stick that stuff on your current turntable and arm. Don’t worry, it peels right off if you don’t want it. With this tape you will hear what I’m talking about. Basically for $40 you will begin to appreciate what is going on. And it will be money well spent because it will make what you already have sound so much better.
There’s other tweaks like this. Do them all now, learn, and it will help you appreciate and understand why its worth upgrading. Then when you do and move all this stuff over to the new rig, wow you will appreciate it all over again.