I seriously doubt its alignment. Odds are your "obvious right side bias" means the center image is a few inches, to maybe a foot, to the right. If that is the case then my question is does it shift as you play a record? Because the way the twisted wire thing works it causes anti-skate to change as the arm moves across the record. Honestly don't even know which way, that's just how messed up a thing VPI has made here. No idea how much torque the wire puts on the arm, or if it increases or decreases as the arm sweeps across a record. Oh, I can see what it would seem to do. But so many people have had so many different problems with it I seriously doubt anyone really knows. Anyway, one thing I am pretty sure of, it is not consistent across the record. So you should be able to hear the image shift and be different at the end compared to the beginning of a side.
Right channel bias in analog setup
As an analog newbie, I’ve been fighting with my turntable setup for a while now and am raising my hand for some help please. I have an original VPI Scout with a new Denon 103R cartridge connected to a Denon AU-300LC step-up transformer. This is connected to a Sutherland 20/20 phono pre-amp, which is connected to a Mark Levinson 326S pre-amp/Levinson 436 monoblock/Wilson Audio Sasha output. For some reason, when I am playing records, there is an obvious right channel bias where imaging seems right of center, regardless of what record I’m playing. When I switch to digital sources such as my CD player (Levinson 390S) or streaming (Amazon Echo Link), with the same music, everything is centered as it should be. I assumed the problem was an azimuth setup problem as I've read that channel bias can be due to balance problems there. After trying different variations, I finally got the system to image correctly, but the arm/cartridge is ridiculously leaning to the left. I can't believe this is the correct setup and that it won't eventually hurt the records and/or the cartridge over time. Any suggestions/help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
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- 14 posts total
- 14 posts total