A pitch too High!


Recently, I damaged the V2 MM cartridge of Clearaudio Concept Wood turntable, so had it changed with a Grado Prestige Blue. The VTF for V2 is 2.2g while Grado blue stands at 1.5g. I took someone’s help to fix this. He even made azimuth adjustments and it sounded fine. But I soon realised that the sound had become thinner, voice being the primary indicator and just before the stylus landed on the record, it skipped back a bit then hit the record. Sometimes the tonearm would skip all the way out of the record, backwards. I called the guy back, and he felt the VTF should be fixed to around 2g to avoid the backward skip. He did so and that problem was licked and it seemed the voice thinning issue had also vanished. But last night, I put on the first pressing of Aretha Franklin Amazing Grace, and all along I found her pitch way higher, it was all too high pitched and uncomfortable. Seemed the bass had gone missing a little. On my Boulder 866, I could immediately hear the difference when the track was played through Roon. It was not as high pitched, thin as it sounded on analogue. I intend to call the guy again but wanted to know from experts here as to what the issue could be.
128x128terrible
@chakster Thank you for this

@mijostyn You are absolutely correct, he set the Grado tracking force to 1.5g, the first time he did it. He did not touch the anti-skating because Clearaudio recommends we do not. I think I have read somewhere that it is set to medium and works for 2g VTF. 

It sounds thin because the suspension is compressed under the two grams
 Can you elaborate on this? I did not understand this.

Back off on the tracking force to 1.5 grams and lighten the antiskating...
I know it's right below the turntable but no clue which side to turn to increase or decrease. A little hesitant to do it because I might mess it up.



Dear @terrible :  I don't know how many LPs you own but I know is that that Grado is an entry level cartridge as it's that Clearaudio tonearm. Sooner or latter like today the problem comes out.

If you want to be serious about LPs reproduction you need to be serious too in the level of your analog rig and most important than this is that you try to improve your very low/poor knowledge and skills levels to make your self the overall TT/cartridge/tonearm/phono stage set up.

You have the " problem " you bougth it and nothing else. You can't ask oranges to a stone, rigth?

R.
@rauliruegas I own about 200 LPs and I don’t think because Grado is an an entry level cartridge and Satisfy a beginners’ tonearm, I am facing these problems. I just want my rig to give the reproduction it should. You have read my situation incompetently.

As for knowledge,  everybody starts somewhere and there’s plenty to be had on the interwebs. But I don’t see myself setting up a system, but I’ll surely go for a significantly better turntable soon. In the meantime, I think the one I have is good enough to understand more about analogue. 
Ok, then start to learn and don't be angry because my " incompetently " understood. 

To each his own. No problem with me, it's you who own those items.

R.
OP,
Kudos for not letting anyone denigrate your system or level of understanding, especially when they offer no constructive advice in return.  For the record, the $2000 Clearaudio Satisfy tonearm is continuously wired, well designed, highly resolving and far from just an entry level tonearm.

- There are some great suggestions above on how to proceed, esp. on returning to first principles with vtf , etc. 

- If you are at all still concerned about actual pitch, your turntable speed can be easily verified with a free phone app, RPM, and adjusted if needed.

- It seems you were pleased with your previous setup before cartridge problem.  If all else fails, you may need to examine whether this Grado is actually a good fit, or maybe not? 

- If you get to that point, you are probably at the right place for a wealth (flood?) of cartridge upgrade recommendations.