My last post is exactly as is or if you like: you need a very well damped tonearm to match a cartridge, not enough to stays in the ideal resonant frequency range. Easy.
R.
Looking for tonearm inspiration
Dynavector DRT XV-1s rebuilt/are tipped. Odd as it may seem, there was no tonearm with the turntable. I have yet to identify what the phono stage, but listening so far suggest a Sutherland Loco (still open to alternatives). There must be many out there that have had experience with the SME 20/12 turntable and perhaps a few that have had experience with the SME/Dynavector combination. Can you suggest a tonearm that had some magic for you with either bit of gear? Wide range of music: Rock, Jazz, Female Vocal and a bit of Opera from time to time.
@atmasphere : I not only understand what mijo said in the post I was refer to and before he posted his " black thread " fenomenal discovery for the audio world analog lovers ! ! last post. My last post is exactly as is or if you like: you need a very well damped tonearm to match a cartridge, not enough to stays in the ideal resonant frequency range. Easy. R. |
Can anybody translate Raul's last post for me? Just the first paragraph. I got the last paragraph. He is saying even if a tonearm and cartridge are set up correctly you still need a damping device. OK Raul, Why do you still need a damping device in a tonearm and cartridge that are set up with a resonance frequency of 8 Hz? What exactly are you damping? What does the damping do? |
Just the first paragraph.Yeah, I couldn’t make it out either. And I can’t sort out if he’s talking about a damping device like a trough or if he means a damped arm tube (another thing altogether) or if he’s talking about the mechanical resonance window. @rauliruegas , again, use the google translator. Go to Google,type ’convert Spanish to English’(https://www.google.com/search?source=hp&ei=kOdbX7HwLInbtQbhtpnYBw&q=convert+spanish+to+engli... ) Put your text in Spanish into the box; highlight the English result and paste it here. When reading a post that you feel you need to respond to, do yourself another favor and drop the post into the Google translator, only this time using ’convert English to Spanish’. Then you can read it correctly. As another tip, there is something called the ’Dunning Kruger Effect’. This is where a person that knows a little about something tends to think that they are a lot more expert at it than they really are. It tends to cause blind spots in a person’s perception of the world. In this case you might think you are pretty good at English; please use the Google translator. |